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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-04-30 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa~· -- •• • I . . I I • • I ·-.L j ........ -. , ' • ' . ,.. . . . . • I .. • C~mpfei.~ ·~~t of Baee Enirie·s • Page 8 on ' • • t ... + ' .. ' ., ) .. .. I ·Not .. Jus:tified' . , ".-. -"' • ' I ' .. __.-.... *f • • ••• . • . . ' , . . . . • • . . .. :.llaneers:. Beat-Rap in ~Jtdi~ Trial ... UoJDe-From Worltf:: ' '. . . . . ) ' ' DAILY PILOT • V. 1ets, U .S.-supported S. ' * * * 10' * * * . 01.1 ~h'· D:e .···p· .. ~ ·ll·' :t .o; c .9 .·m: '. b@,~.· -.. !.~~.·-~,.: t;' ,.J ·i~~ .. "' ·. • '1' .~I~.. .. .. t.; .. ':!.~..:,,.· .... -::. w '• ' . ~~~. ,,.,, • .. .• , •. .r+l ~.-...... ' '.'t " ) ' t ~ '";j •. ' "i ' ·: '"':l ··Jot '•'1 Tl'IUMDA Y AFTERNOON, ~fil\J~ 30, 1970 . . ' .. MDMVows To Be Ready Next ·Time By JOHN VALTERZA , Of tMI 0.llY Pl .. 1 Stitt "They all Call us a violent organization, but we don't go around spraying machine guns i'..Jtq people's houses." Paul said, gazing at bullet holes in the buff stucco house in Oceanside. The youth, wearing bushy sideburns, frizzy hair and a button with Che Guevara's portrait in red and black pot1ted out shattered windows. a bullel- chipped sidewalk, then vowed. "We're arming ourselves now, and we"ll be ready to protect ourselves next time." • The first time occurred about midnight Tuesday when three men drove in front <li the headquarters of the M<lvement fer a Democratic Military (MOM) and <lpened up with a machine gun. The burst of a dozen slugs ripped througfl the front of the residence and one shot hit a Marine before he could hit ibe floor, .. It bit brother Jesse (Woodward) in the arm; then went into hi s chest. The slug stopped about an inch from his heart," Paul explained: Woodward , poJice said, was a Marine Corps deserter. He is r~ering after surgery at the U.S. Naval Hoepital. Other bullets lodged inl.o.,;'Walls and ripped ~gh posters · h a n g i n g throughout the hou&e. one alug first wt!T!t .through the back of Eldridge CleaVtr's head in <>ne poster, tllen passed tbtough a ·pOster showing a clenched fist holdllg a rifle complete with ·a slogan about anning oneJelf by Bobby Seale.· then whizzed past fOOr tnhabi~ls of the house, finally to stop in .r far wall. It hit 'a poster phOto o,f Che Guevara In thtrleft cheek be.tore finally stopping. ,Le~ to the identity of the vigilantes -witnesses said they were three in nur .. ber -number zero. Oceanside ,police, who say the case Is totally tbeln, pot lhe Marine Corps', ~ ::itl \hey have drawn a blank on clues. ")".e don't have a car, a description ()f subjects .•• nothing but a dozen spent cartridges rron1 a weapon," one detective said Wednesday afternoon. The group of a dozen or so members nl the MDM In the )\ouSi! at abOOt the same time, howeyef<. uy Plat their assailants are Marioes. The grotip's aJtQ.ationJ come .... ffllib ... lheir obviously unpopular cau9e1 on the IS.. SHOOTING, Pogt.11 ( l , DAil Y PfLOT ltllff ...... CHE POSTER' PUNCTWR&D Armed C•rnPI in Oceans ide N udity Char ges ln SA Difmissed For 11 Dancers Efeven dancing glrls Wednesday won dismissal of indecent e1Po11Jre charges fil~ after police said they performed nude in two Orange County-bars. ~Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Robert Rickles tossed out the complaints against the 11 eirll. He also dismissed related charges against three male employes of ,the taverns. The men had been charged: with In· citing "'the girls to brea k obscenity statutes. Judge Rickles ruled that codes govern- ing so-called bottomless dancing cannot be applied to~ beer bar perf9rm~r. lt was indicated that his ruling was drawn from a similar ruling recently issued by an Orange County Su~rior Cow-t appellate panel ih which 'Jtidges Herbert Hetlands and WDllam Murray outvoted Judge Raymond ·Thompson In chaJlenging . the hitherto a c c e p t e d obscenity interpretatiOn. AU 'the tlt8-Uons dlsmlssectwefe Issued by Orange County sheriff's officers in the Tuscan Room, Tustin and the Sarong 'Bar. santa An1:-All 14-dl'fen'dants-.were represented by Gardena attorney Be:rrien Moore. •• \ .. ·Kennedy~ Says Ruling • • Unjustified 5.39" 'Set . Sail. . . Fleet Off to ·En$enada ~tock Prices Failing Again After Trading RaJ.Jy Fizzles NEW YORK (AP) -Stock mark_el prtces bega11: falling today In moderately active. trading after a rally attempt faded away. The Dow Jones industrial average by JJ :30 1a.m. had slipped O.lt to 737.20. The lead of advances over declines nar- rowed on the New YCirk Stock Exchan ge. Shortly after the opening.' the Dow average had been a:head by more than 4 points. Advances had outnumbered declines by a 3 to I mprgln. Analysts satd early tradlng-tlad been conrined to proUUIOtiili'Wltlf Die ieiiera public altting on the 1idelines. l Analysts stressed. the eiirty action and Wednesday's sb.arp gains had beta brought on ·by exceptionally heavy ;e111ng in recent sesa:loM. They said itovestors had been anxious to buy It the lower prices. However, lhey said the basic conditions that Jed to the markers recent slump have not changed. They said investor! were eitremcly cautious and were' awaiting · President Nil(oo's ':.imbodlan ,speech tonight.1 • 'After two straight days of ,sl:t·year 'lows, the stock · market regist~ one ~ on ts lilggesl-giliis .r-o;e year wec1- neaday • 'l ' I ' ? I • ·. ' ' · Fo1~ce. ·aeady · For Iµ~ny , Days'·~~~ori 1 -Orange Coast Slnshlne is tbe1 order of the day 1 for Fri~ay, with temperatures In tl\e ~hlmmtrlng ,.~ .aloft! ~· coast and up to a aijdjni 'iO "'de! , grees further ihland. . INSIJll•: 'FODA ;f. . . ' The "cable car named, desire't rolled up to ci $501000.payo// /O"f 1 the Qfrl who I01t mot• thtm 11.,r hea11t in "Sa11 Fr.anciaco. See. Paoe 4. • ~::c.i.;-II• ~ ' = ift-. u.: ci.ullleil Jil-41 .. .....,., ,.... .. , Ctmlu .JI Or'INt l-ty lt c"" .. "' ti 1r•11t• ,......, n ottlll J+Mk•• lf ~ ... e:tffttlal ..... ' ·-!Ml Mll'Mh "j •flltrt•lflll)Mt tt•tl . '""'-'*'" ,_...,. n L ""'"""'" 14 ........ "' • A111! l.tMtrt 11 WlfMll'l """" 1>1f 1· I I I I DAll.YPllM s Thurlday, Aprlj 30, 1970 1'1-P•e l •OOTING .. • • • ... _lli!hllllr camp~ ... MarWt\a.e -.._i.r amoole 6ie , ofliceh; bu""t -,.i>~ ~In~ .... ..,, lbe .-...,..; .. ..,. MJ?i' eiOmber claims. ilooe riolil on the hue last Feb. 11 wth blamed ey the Marines OB tile lllilM-pp, the -'.studenll !J>r-· a iiiilOl:ratic Society and the 'Billet P .... Party. fte MDM spotesmen char1t that thl.CArps bu ~ them wrooily !or ln!!llD( the vloienl diiturbances. 'lWe will not be intimidated,'' {'-lplhl!Dll fill 'fiitdf .._Uld lil I prepared stotemei)I Wednesday, "Neither the brass, nor the terrorists will stop · us trun comlnuing to fight for tbe righta of Gli."-. And to illustrate thell Point, the group annoupoed plans imml\'(tlajely after tbe shooting for a demQDStration at an Oceanside part tonight to protest the ~l ''We expect at least 1,000 marchers," one member said with a· smile. 1!>e rally tonight will be followed l>y 1'NlntPan in.May," Ji _series of marches In 111 dlJ ......... the same lhbll. " -~ •aldlnf 1111 ldiie daya a -. 'I. dtll1 :e at th! house· ,.U..·;.... lo · the DilidMil and cont bui1et 1ha ~ ~u:. lfo<i2 and others JI .... wheii tllio MI1ll lmi -a nMiOtli Wo tili{v '"' oT ' .,. 1"111 .. and ·~ ..., ll9t weekend ,bf iio. tress· Jane Fonda" ,.... lies. "We hav.e ·!Onie · pretty reactionary nellhbors,". Paul, said as he _b\lrikered POSTER PUSHES RALLY, COVERS SHATTERED WINOOW · In Oceanside, A Sign With • Du•I Purpose .. 11\e. -11111ji. .. ,"They are almost all old people who hfte · juJt paid off the mortgage and art obriou!ly scared to death, ·~ "W• hav~ a co~le of. 1-g.Jiairedo . neighbors bizt dllr,, but tbil's all," M.eJa ·Hospital ~ ork~r ' -; r ht~· ,.;.; . Obvioully the nelghbofs have a right to their fear. A dozen bullets pointed that out ine other nl&bt, · 8l)d now that the victims btte .med tblmselves and set rup "McUrllr'' ii thl.ld9 arallll4 ine tjOok, thl te......, ol lhe si!Uatllll Ii Obvlolt. s·iab bed; Jan ito r Held And the MDM move111ent now ~ .. It.I martyr. 'Ille MOM leaflet tierald!ng tonighl's rally ..,., • . • .; -· . "Brother Jesse was shot down because he stood up to speak for and ·to· the people who. are tieing per.iecuted bf llbe tnllltary. / .when first put on the .-eroilier .i-lhauted •an power to thi' ~1.;1" But not ill 1he 'frritb DI the MDiil A houMl•per at I COiia Mesa-- \,alescent '11iei>itat wes 1labued in Iii• back five limes' CoDowlng a quarrel wtth a fellGW employe We<\Jlesday. A M-ytar- old janitor drpaed the attacker off. Mrs. Vlrjliila Kerby, 43, ·heed housekeeper at tbe facility at 2055 Thurin >.ve., was listed . in serious condition today at Costa 'Mes1 Memorial HO.pita!. She suffer~d .-coll8psed lung ill the early afternoon boUr attack. ' · Is aimed ai lbe milita,Y, . B · db F Civilian police are. equally to ·blame, a am reeway gevetal "'members said as they pondered :'~ •• do about • broken mimeograph Plan Gets Cool "'Illr1 ·and the military work hind·ln· • IJand..Yaa ... ~ have.~ In t BL ~ h R ' • ' ~;!~i:':fi'1?" ~m .. :. . • ..~~ , eaction But tbe shooting pointed out one in· By ALAN DIRKIN consistency -moments after the 0t "" 0.111 l"Hot si.tt vigil4* ,Fir !lptd off into the d1tr~e:n. ~ in the boOll!: made a p&ane A *-.fign maltked 'lNo Way'' in · call ttJt hell, clear· lettering would typify reacti-0n fn They ct1fe"a the potlct. Huntington Beach today to Assemblyman Robert Badbam'I proposal to re-route From P .. e l SAILOR •. -. P1,ific Coast Free\fiyr . "It would be rilce· 1! .,. · illdn't have to have the freeway down by the cGBst but ~t's thue becallSe It':; n_e(:.ess_ary," City Engineer William Hartge ccrn.· mented. to escort the Return of the Dove to He was discussing a plan"put forward ita~I pl~. by Badham (&-Newport Beach) to route Oriblun, "Wlio Ill Nil July 25, 1915, the Coa!I Freeway atQUnd N'1'Jl0rt and went through. f~ cats as companions its Corona tH!l Mar Corttmunlty. To do and two sailboat.I in the 33,000-mile so would .mean. clianglhg freeway pat· adfm~, Jn which death wa1 near terns in central Huntington Beach. at ttmei._ • · . City traffic tnglneer Paul Cook 8tld ilia ~boli. the· -,24-loot: Dove, A!semblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun-UmP.d • SL ~ lht V:i r g In tington Beach) also greeted Badham's IslarKb . · ~ liad; t ~ t ~ t?· ptj>poeal with sftpticism. <U9nulecf&y fOU1;,~~:,.~1'PJae;!d-~'it 'lfOUld cau~e trem~ndou1 aurfac~ b~t.betaraercr ;~~,...~~ .. ~"" st!O<t problems 1J1 Huntington Beach, He radioed !iie 1 .. Qltll .. Biili<• said. quarters at iA;J ~ . 1 • • Cool tesj>onded with. "It would choke aft<rnoon that be Wl\I. '4tliilliL. ~other freeways." tile world -and IO . ~-:le~ ~ -'Ji'UiOm•s ~Jal! the P~lll: COlsl Sen Clemente, boll ~ · 1":if ~ way wootd be deleted east of the lihape. · , • J· ' --.-.Route39inHuntlngtonBeach. Navi&ator• at the II~ J •, •lit ploMeoHo be an eight-lane Dlttrlct t;bdquartera in ' · 1· ~lray ~~ half a mile ted his pc>Oltion li!N at,,;;,., . ;\~ lbe Milt tL ~-r<lllfhlY. of Pyramld lj<ad; 'the llWlll't laid '~ ....... >l!Owloi>d . ~Jo . 'J ,<ii • • ) tip. • .. -i:-"" •i..:,. ~"I~ wouli! ....n that -. ·• Inmead iii ~;wiif tra!llc run· .. • n111g acia!lt Ir! """'.).~U. .downto the coasi lirllf ftP<!1 ff tio siht up the Route'39 Fteew~y ana hOoKed up to the San Diego Freeway and then the Corona del . .Mir Freeway, th\14 bypass- ing . the Harbor Ana. DAILV PILOT .. ..,.., It•\ Hnri ..... lfWI; t..t. ..... ,.. ,.....,. 'f.tt.Y Cette Mn• S. C......_ OfltA.HCI! c;.0.ut l"Ulll.1$HIHC COMl"AMY R•D•rl N. :W••d ~1llNlt .... Mtlllltl' JaJ J:. ¢11rf1f \'ltl '*IDellt .... ~-11 Mtftltef lho111::i!•••ll Tho111H A. MYrpki~• ~. MMIOlntl l!dlt« • Ri~1rd '" N.n Sovtll Or.,.e Cwntt Edlltr .,,.;.. Ctlt. INH1 • WHI 91V Strtll N..,.,.: ••~= 221111 11111tO' aou1tW1,. ~ INCftt '°"'' A-HuntlAflDI! llMdl! t 911dt 8:11119\IM ~n Clll'IW!l9' • El c ...... 1no ltt1I Tr pgcdy A.verte.d . . As To t Re scued . ·:.lit~· ~.ewport ·Pool A Mewpoll Budi toddler w11 roporled , fn<IOOd-loollY al'Hoat'Hospltll •after lhe nearlt 'lroWned Wedn•day In -lier swtnlmina pool, Firemen •d Senta B•Jhahl, 1, the .daul}lter of Mr1 •nd Mn. Paul J, Ber&dalll ri. 900 A!lllond Pia<e ""' INlled from the water by her. mother and &ster. ' "'· . A nelgh.bor of ·the Ber1dah!s', Robert French, 1ave the child mouth to mouth resuscitation while · anofller neigbDor, Irene Fleager, pumped water Crom the little girl. rhe fire deplrlment rtse\lt. team 1ave tile clilld <ilyglh end reported she was breathlni ~; 8le time Ibey arrived at the ho<pl\a I. Wednesday'a lncldent was the second ne,r drowntng In Ne"'J)Ort In two day•. On Tu"di,r, Dennis Cole, a of Covino waa pulled out of hi& gr.andlq111et:1 PoOl at 5001 Bruce Crescent. Hoopitai olflolall Paid they expect to release the Cole boy today. ' Albert llcllteri, Ill, of IBS Colla Mesa st., Cbrta_Meu, was arreattd and booked for investl!ai!on of· a!Sauit with httenl to commit murder after the altercatiOn. Detective LleUtenant Hal -Fischer said Scittetl ftl cooPerltlve and remorleful after the incident, apparently ~temmiOg from .u argument over Mrs. Kerby :;idin& with bis ez.wife in a court case. In~Ugators piecing together what OC· C\ll'l'Od' bl tlli si.reroom .at the Bl,yvin' COnvilescent. l\Cilpitaf ltaid Mra. Kerby trguld wiUi l!ldl~ri and tunied to leave. The eveht. were witnessed by jariltor Elmer Lee, 64, who said be beard the conversation between victim and suspect. "When she turned, Scuteri pulled a knife out 'ot his pocket and stabbed her in the back," Lee tcld police. Mri; kerby, of IOI 0ran1etho,pe Ave.1 Anattelm, eolia~ into a chair mlQ Lee·ltaid flculeri fert lipon ber again. Lee said he grabbed Scutert from behirtd a11d dragged him 31J!!!f from the bleeding bead housekeepet', allowing h~r to get out of the crowded quarters. "He stabbed me," she mumbled, stag- gering~ taward belp. A aroup of elderb' lad!el sang "How ~t Thou Art,11 in ~ _hoapital lounge as nurses adrrtlittstered first aid 'to the badly wounded woman. "~terl was·sitting in the storeroom e1yin1: •i•m 9orry, I'm sorry," " the janitor explained. - • ... From Pale J, KOPECHNE • ~ ... a tidal Porni. The aulo, Ith Kennedy at the .wheel , went off lhe bridge and landed Upside dOWJI in the pond, arowning tbe girl. Boyle noted several points that came out in the testimony to back his feeling Kennedy and Mis& Kopechne did not i•lend to go ta Edgartown, including: -Miss Kopechne left her purse at the cottage Where she and Kennedy had been attending a party for Kennedy friends and "boiler room" girls who had worked l11 the Robert Kennedy cam· paign, including Mi!iS Kopeclme. ....:Miss Ko~hne did not ask her room- mate at..lhe iti6t.I fl7r \be <key to their room bef1!re"11!av111g UU! patty. ' ·:. -The felT)I that ""°'8ed ·rrom Cllap. paqulddlck liland t, Ji:4prtown stopped at midnight, ind no~il.arrlngements (or a later crossing ha'd been made. Boyle said "l Inf~ a• rtuonable ud probable explanation (){ ti.e totaliur of Ule above facta. i1 that ).Sennetly · and Ko~hbe did not intend td returh to ~gartown at that time; that Kennedy did .not intend to driVe to the rerry • slip and his turn onto .Dike· Road was infenOonal. Having rtaclled' lhi!! con. · cluslon, the questloa theJll arises as to whether there •as anylhlng criminal in his alferaUon cf the motor veh!Cle .• . . ' . Orthopedic Gear Needed by Grou p Used orthopedic appliances, including crutches, braces. wheel .chairs aad artificai limbo aro needed by lhe )Vorld Health Organizaiiiin for shipment'lo in> poverisbed nations, according to 0. W. Price, member or the Committee for the I! a n d i c a p p e d , People-to-~eople Program. ... Thff C-Ommittee, says Price, Collects . quanUUq "JI theae Ke~. discarded by , recovered .._pe}sons, in ·this countg, ind ships them to MexiCQ, Soulh 'Ainerlc1, India and Africa. 11Jf anyorie in the Laguna area llu such appliances stored away in aa atUc or basement, I would be glad to pick " them up and deliver lhem ..to the VA Hospital tn Long Beach, where collecliOns for WHO are 85.!embled," said Price. Ha Illa)' be reached al Ui-1121. ·- 'No Lons T(ff m Move' • W~l!INGTON (UPd -'l'IM 0 White' lo·ilnote them "welilol pment on open The litter, written on White Hooll Hoqse ptlvately assured key con-~ •American flank to the enemy." statioilery, sai if Comlnunist activitYi gre.ssmen today that President Nixon -"This is not a Joac4erm 'quicband' In Cambodian sanctuariet Weta !s.nortd~ doea not intend to in'volve the United o'peratioa theit would , lead to a new Jt would "jeopardiZe the entire South Stal?. ill a liJoll.lerm qulctaand opera, 'Vie~liluatlon'-Jn f:ut!~-vtetnam.,., 09""tion" and "alfect o\lf .UQnl' m.eambblla. • • Jetter salt. 11lt ls • ltrtu-abiliiy to cone our 'fithdrawal. .. J!ut lhe uflilOl<i statemi!\6ieircuiated lblt It aii,lil~gral patj ii. diir · g,,f)li! J lican segator predictff on e.p1lo111Jlf Nrd 11\o Pteill!ent found iii '\iieinam. It ts no! In l'l!PIY' to • •• · that 9n bie bas ol a talk with Delena it necessary to .send advisors~ arms of (Cambodian Premier) Loa Nol's.re-Secretary Melvin R. Laird that NiJ:oa's into .C~bodia from VJetnam to save quests for aid to cambodia.!• • use of American forces would be on AnMIJCmi Urio," · llllllnf lMV'lliflllitt II •lilt.• -''I tery tlnlltai\' bllll. •• - The memorandum WaL-circulatedJn~Irifu-Cambodia,"· the statement sa1d Sen. Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.) said advan~ of ~e ~esi~t's s~ to "this effi;ll't to clean out the enemy lie discussed the situation with Laird i"' the 11aUon tonight m which he will seek will result in a saving ol American Wednesday night. .to allay fears that the allied thrust lives." ··Dole said of U.S. involvement: "As·· into Cam•a may widen the war in -'M1fily the Predd*t~' all the facts l understand it we're talking about JOI.I~ ~a.. A. __ • __ ~ • an'ttlla sltua~" ibl • HOuse memo a two, three or 'rour week period. Then 1 Tbe ~q said that 'fUIDIII' fGl:c9i 'h.14. "~ ibtW Mt in.'*bat he considers there's the beginning -0f the rainy season ba•.e , 'eno~ou~ly ~~a!M"~ ~ .. to '!' 1he bijf~ ~e&t:f ~ our country and everything will bog down. But it's hoStiJe ICtfvffieS In Cafl\&<qa inif'ihit ad(f, Ot1r fldiips, 11 going ta be tough for a few Weeks." \' CAJ;m~;;;~ ~ .. , ~•tin~~ .:Blas to if . • . 3 "'-~. -. . ~·w~ U.S. advisers wei. • .,1 ]rour ir( D~u~fa:, Space SimulatQr . Alihougtaal c•bociian spokesman in ~ • ' ' ' ·' ' "' "' ' ' ~· . !'at~~ ~J!,r:;,r;:o_:1 ~':::~ · · Four~!il. a~J:.l.!l 1 sr>iice .U.uon aimul!tor mail)lalh 11 a..t : II vio!Jted' Cid!~ neutrality' 1roni apace Iii Rim • at""1Pf rejl.its ""' juat aa• ulronailb dicmatches saw! t6e 0 1. ' 1 But it's <111f .. a.st1Jttull. anti .wa&dd.llo If th@ l'@te In Orbit.~ ~,-pera ion was they'll be let out in follr'da · th • coordinated with ·the Cambodian . army • . , ys. o. er crew duties lrill include the_ to the extent a dozen Cambodians linked , The ~dents, enterJd the simulator !a!rlng .of b_acterial cul.t~re ~mpleS for· up with tHe ldY'iftcltil Vletliaffieie fofetj ·-~~--at ·.~U.. D·o-u. a I as nuCrob1olog,acal analysis. Daily rouµne . lil 'guldes. ASlioiiaildcs:~Y'!'.SJ>Ke cen~ in of the crew will be dividM IDie •iiiil'. The first officially acknowledged drive northem·HWJtingtOO BeaCfi for a five.day hours for sleep, e1~ht to 12 hour~ fOr . Into Cambodia by South' Vietnam stay. ~ork and four to eight hours of leisure troops had the official ~ of destr~~ · 'The ~ 4 tii ~preparation for time.. . . ~ . itig VJet CbD{ 8nlt Nbrlb r\rliiaia . ~ .. ~'°'11"1 ....... 1'Wi to define the Activities of _tbe crew lhcl. <COOChtions-· tilse campo ...-.,. •ll!e· bartlh I mese ~*'~um ri'4U1i;d lor Id Jhe siJnul•lnr "lli Joo ·~rutonod ' the cominunl41 riicf -1r0iii' lhe ~iii:} · l1J11g·d!!fatioif'irif..rdtil-·in or51t!ni· .,... ~rouncf.lhe-doc~ bY. -~cDoiinell. DouglU-' -some In co'fftihandeeret1-:cars _ the stations. . ground crew~ 1:1til1z1ng television and 800pe of the action wis extended ~cDonnell Douglas scientists explajned voice con_im~cabon sys~ems, computers · Lt. G . . · that a major goal of the program is and special instrumentation. . en. Do Cao Tri said ~.~as, lo evaluate the qipabilKy of a ~e Mc~ell Dougla' space statkn·~ -~endine!t Ule opef~lon_ 1beca~ : regenerative llfe IUJ>ppi't; l)'ltem to JI((). simulator 1s a double-walled chamber,. n ma.ny ... ya o s \ \rkle a habhabl~ atmojpbere and poi&ble iJ feet in diameter and 40 feet Iona:. area thoroughly. ne .'!lll, ti')' lo corlln>I Wiier wiinoli! relllpplJ" bJ ~mioullJ It is equipped with •a 150-<:uhlc-Ioot . ti\bee ~· to trap them mhlde andlidtroy redaiming ca1'on dioxide • pfrsi:)iration airlock for entrance to and exit from ~ t m.. and urine waste for reuse ' the pressurized interior. He s.al!f three o/ig~es of $outb Viet· AnQUter obj~tiv.e ,of the re»e11rch is •namese .troops were involved in the pash to determllie the elfeets of a long period along Highway .1. Newly structured South of uninterrupted conrmement on a crew. Club J udo Cl ass Vietnamese brigades total aboqt .80 per:-. '!be crew'tnmJ all ~p ltlldentl cm cent of ~an --Americ~ · ~Y brigade-< Of-··-temtxJt'1t lel~! trotn Uit:lt •ludte1 were----... , 4,500 mWJ, but milill!r1 IOilrces id Salpn seiet!ed ·on lhe tllJlt · 61 cOi!!Dteltbs!~t N d · ·1· h · , salH Tnu'' for"!'• totiJid about 7,~ min. phi'.iiw and p 1 y c Ho Jog Jc a i ea· ee ! €UC eT . RuAI! satd Am611can radvjsets weii aritlriailons. · · , .. vlalble ~lbn~ the route, ~ng. rMllc 'Ibe qurit for the five-day trial rlin Take. Utis press release however yoU: ; communications and plottmg map iricllideJ WUton flong· 2 f 4 ye 1 r ~ o j d care to. coordinates. There also were a number aerodliutid major from daJ Tech· "The Boys' CU.lb Of 'the Hai-bar Area of Green Beret men with Cambodian Lfft~e Hdot:mafi U staduate student Judo C!,a~. whlcti was fonned in 1966 : mercenary groups which have been used · in loctai plj:~·fftmt UBC: Jalries ahd has a .tdtlil of 20 active menibe?s. against the Viet Cong near the Mekona: Shoer:bakh,~.!1.! aetoibioe . i~g iii In Deed af a q_llaiifie,d instructol-. · Delta regioo for y~r11, ~ 111 u...,, and tori'tt DoilJon :ro-"Olir . former ini!rul'lor, Larry Al firs~ ru...tll sail!, Gambodiln ye1t-<ild -pdlii\O etl!lleol In ~cal Castorena, is no longer able to handle ' r'!iteni.. alni!iil. anil~wbec1 Jnd PDSl!I . ~ !tiitn UCLA. . · th• c:Jau," gruUifng for jix)togtal{lir as 'the SOtJth • During tbe 90-day and the ftve-day · IntereSted parties may cont~ct Larry:~ Vietn~ese columns passed by without rune, crew melfl~4 ~~ ~onll9f the Darnell, at &0-8812, according to Boys' opposition. performanci of the eqwpnleat In the Club officials. · · ' ··Th• formal li1li•n el1D11nee you'd 1xp1Ct to COit rnuch, rnu1h mor•f Saw~ elesant triple dresser , bedrooms by Lenoir House $2·99··~~i~;~~~~ lrlpll clrt1aer, mirror, ind h•...O. tome hffdbollrcl. 0011'1 mlu thbl Olllllencl!tlf ••tit ' s11tM: 1 • .Mk.·~ s1i.ot · ' . a.in, 90Pl'liltlottld Mod9rn II• witft un'91111 ..,.......,...look. 111 l?Ull PUL L PAOI AD IN FAMI LY WEEKLY-MAY 2 PROFESSIC~ ,JI GARRtT[ .. FURN lllJ -~~ INTERIOR DESIGNERS O• .. M ... , 11ion. lo l'tf, ·-2215 HARBOR ILVD. r COSTA MESA, CALIF. U6·0275 6-46·0271 ., •• ·I • , .. I • -. ' r' ' .- -. . . .. I . ... (. I · ,._ " .. t. 1, t . , I ' ; : •. ,. I ,. .: .. ' .. • .• I I I I • ' . ' Huntington_ Qeaeh . . . ·~· Tottay'a n..1. . i<ci ._...:.;;.:;; N.Y. illawv-. • ,VOL 63, NO. 103, J SECTIONS, +4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRIL JO, 1970 TEN CENTS ' . I Hitlltington Wants No Part of··Freeway·Change By ALAN DIRKIN Of 11111 D1lfJI 'll•f 51111 A stre:et sign marked "No Way" in clear lelterlng would typl(y reaction in Huntington Beach today to Assemblyman Robert Badbam's proposal to re-route Paci!lc Coast Freeway. "It would bC ni ce if we didn't have 1o have the freeway down by the coast ·but 'il's there ~ause it's necessary." City Engineer William Hartge com- mented. • •le was discussing a plan put forward by Badham (R-Newport Beach) to route the Coast Freeway around Newport and its Corona del Mar Community. To do so would mean changing freeway pat- terns in central Huntington Beach. City traffic engineer Paul Cook and Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach) aJso greeted Badham 's proposal with skepticism. ";t woold cause tremendous surface street problems In llunUngton Beach,'" Burke said. Cook responded with , "lt would choke up the other fr eeways." Under Badham's plan the Pacific Coast Freeway would be deleted east of Lhe proposed Route 39 in Huntington Beach. Route 39 Is planned lo be an eight-lane free'lt'ay running north-south half a mile to the east of Btaeh Boulevard, roughly along Newland Street. • Badham's proposal would meap ·that f . SPACE RESEARCH -College students selected for research program inside space station simulator at McDonnell Douglas in Huntington Beach test the device's communications console. From Wilson Wong, Terry Donlon, Lawrence and James Shoemaker. left arc Hootman Bogus Blastoff I _;\ ••• ..... , instead or the CoaSl Fruway traffic run- ning south from Adams Avenue down to the coast and through Newport it be sent up the Route 39 Freeway and hooked up to the San Diego Freeway and then the Corona del Mar Freeway, thus "bypass- ing the Harbor ma. While Badham says the idea to skirt corQna de! Mar is his, State Sen. John Schmitz (R-Tustin) concurs and uys the legislators will present simifa r bills ll1 both houses of the Le&islature. From Sacramento, Burke said that he understood Badh'aln's main concern is for the freeway to bypass the Harbor Area and that how that could be done was secondaey. "My first feeling is I.hat attempts have been made over and over by legislators to change . ,decislOftJ· of the state Hlghw8)1 Co m 'm I s s i o n by elimlnaUng or 'changing freeway 'routes, but until now "the-LegisJature1has stopped all efforts o! th!< ldnd beci~ of the . precedent It would set. From ibm Oft every freeway route decision would be made in the Legislature.'.' · The Assemblyman w.ent !)I'!{ '_'If ,he's successful, it would be a ~I b g'surprlst to me. It would be · a precedfnt-tettinr move that would ht mighty difftc\lli to accomplish. . Asked whether he felt there •Wll a l\eed for the Pacific ~l Freew11 in H\Dltlngton Beach and Newport ~. (SH FREEWAY, P11e II Viets Push : Att~ack . . ' V.S.-backed Force Deep in Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -Four tank·led South Vietnamese task forces eslimated al 9,000 men drove deep into Cambodia todllY with U.S. air support, and their commander announced they , would re- main "for many days" to trap and destroy thousands of Communist troops in their onetime sanctuary. Tlie ,'m81n thrust. 'along· Highway I leading from Saigon. to Phnom Penh overran the , Cambodian towns of Chipou and Prasault, 25 mil~s inside Cambodia, and; was ·pu:1hlng westward towards Cam· bodian troops ba5'd at Svay Rieng, 40 miles inside Cambodia and 70 air miles from Phnom Penh. it violated Cambodian neutrality, [ront dispatches said the operation was coordinated with the Cainbodian army to the e.1tent a dozen Cambodians linked up with the advancing Vlelnunese forees a.s guides. The first officially acknowledged driYe lnto Cam bodia by South Vietnamese troops had th~ official purpose of destroy- ing Viet Cong and NQrlh VJetnamese base camps near th~ border. ·But as · the CommUl'lists fled frOm the alli!s -some In . commandeered cars -tbe scope of the acUon was extended. Lt. Gen. ·Do Cao Tri saidi he was e.1tending the operation because : "We will need many · days to aeardl tlJt area thoroughly. We wUl try to control the area , to trap them insid'e Jnci 6estro, them." , He said three brigades of South'· Viet· namesc troops were involvedJ in Ule. JJU* alons Highway I. Newly S'\rtlctufed South Vietnamese ·brigades "total about Ill) pet· cent Cf an American army brlpde or 4,500 men, but military .Ources in Salton said Tri's for~s totaled ~bout 7 ,SCIO men • 'Fi,.dings . lJ'-Jti.stif~d' 1- Beach Group Seeks Mexico Orphans Help Four in Douglas ~pace Slmuilato~ ' Three task forces estimaled al 2,500 each drove into Cambodia in the Parrot's Beak sector which juts into South Viet- nam to within 35 milea or Saigon. A fourth task rorce of 1,500 pushed across f114 b,o~_1,tzti11!'e •)lleko~· ~If, \01!~· •t-Klont ,,.,,,.. ... try· to "'~ 811 tt,11111. ~ • Vk!t Cong ln the area. , So ' far-the soUth' v;etnarfteie · repprt killing 445 Viet Cong and Nerti" Vfet- namese troops and capturing vast sup. plies of eQulpment at a Joss of -32 ·killed and 112 wounded, 55 of the '10Unded strafed by mistake by U.S. helicopter gunships. Two U.S. advisers were reported wounded. ~~~~~~-~~;~riticiz~s.~iidg~ . O~f(opeebpeCase~~·l ~ Several Huntington Beach families are seeking money , blanket.., sheets, pillows ~nd 100 pajamas to help the "Magic Padre" of Baja California. They're calling the pajama drive '·Opera1ion Orphans" because it 's directed toward the 100 youngsters cared ror by the Rev. Henry Vetter of Tecatc, Baja California. Clothing and bedding for the kids. ages 4-17, can be taken to tll! Community Methodist Church, 6662 Heil Ave., Hun-- lington Beach. The dri ve to help the Rev. Vetter·s orphans -he's called the "1-!aglc Padre" because he performs sleight-of-hand tricks for the youngsters -started Sun. dav when three local women and one huSband drove to Tecale. "We saw the young boys in Tecale sleeping on the floor ; in the same clothes night-after-night," reported ~1rs. ll a~na Alekoumbides. a founder of Help Line, !he Phone network that helps drug iisers. "And the girls," she continued. "are ~taying in shacks in Tijliana because !here are no girls (acillties in Tecate." Father Vetter rounded 1~ a n ch o Nazareth. for orphans. in Jul y, _ 1968. But on Jan . 6, this year. a blaze npped through the not yet completed dormitor y, destroying. for the moment, Father Vet- ter's d~am. • . "Why, they don·t even ha\•e runn1n~ v.·ater to v.•ash with." Mrs. Carol Jankowski. exclaimed. The Catholic missionary's fame has spread t b r o u g h o u t Mexico afl!1 into the San Diego area where m~ny residents are collecting money. clothing and bed· ding to tielp the orphanage. "The U.S. Coast Guard 1n Long Beach rccenlly repaired a bus for Father Vet- ter then donated 20 cots for some o! th~ boys to sleep on," ri.1rs. Alekoumbides said. "He's such a humble man. H~ sleeps In his trousers and anything given to him goes to the boys first," Mrs. Jankowski added. . Mrs. Alekoumbldes, an energetic civic crusader in this area. stumbled on the plight or Rancho Nazareth by coin· cidence. "I know a man In Sprtng Valley, Joseph de cresceote, who l?ld me about the Rev. Vetter," she explained. It turned out that Crucente happened lo be passing by Rancho Nau.rel~ the dAY it burst into names and 1f _he had not alerted Father Veller. the !1ve nuns and the boys there, they might not have escaped. ''Besides the clothlng. they need a lot of building materials and manpower 10 reconstruct those dOrms and build new ones so the girls can come down f'rom Tijuana," ri.trs. Alekoumblde~ said. A $2 donation. with checks written to "Operation Orphans," and sent to P.O. Box 1660. Huntington Beach, would •190 help. Mrs. Alekoumbidu said $1 buys eight building blocks for the Tecate mission. ''They need &n awful lot of things and "'e'\'e just got lo get them AOme help lrom here." ' ;~our students art locked up in a space stalion in Huntington Beach. But it's only a station simulator and they 'll be Jet out in four days. The students entered the simu lator Wednesday at McDonnell D o u g I a s Astronautics Company's spa~ center in northern Huctington Beach for a five-day stay. The experiment is In preparation for a 90-day test later to define the technology and procedures required for long duration missions in orbiting space stations. ~fcDonnell Douglas scienUsts explained that a major goal of the program is to evaluate the capability of a regenerative life support system to pro- vide a habitable atmosphere and potable ,.,,ater without resupply by continuously reclaiming carbon dioxide, perspiration and urine waste for reuse. Another objective of the research Is to determine the effects of a long period of uninterrupted confinement on a crew. The crewmen. all college students on temporary leave from their studies, were selected on the basis of comprehensive physical and psychological ex· aminations. The quartet !or lhe five-day trial run includes Wilson Wong, 2 4 -y e a r • o I d aeronautics major1 from1 Cal Tech: Lawrence Hootman. 23, graduatt student in social psychology from USC: James Shoemaker, 21, aerospace engineering student at USC. and Terry Donlon. »- year-old graduate student in medical physics from UCLA. During the 90-day and the five-day rails, crew members will monitor O)e performance of the equipment In the space station simulator, maintain it and attempt repairs -just as aslnmauts would do ii they were in orbit. Other crew duties will include the laking. or bacterial culture samples for microbiological analysis. Daily routine of the crew will be divided into eight hours for sleep, eight lo 12 hours for work and four to eight hours of leisure time . Activities of the crew and conditions in the simulator will be monitOred around-th~lock by McDonriell Douglas "grOUlld crews" utilizing ttlevislon and voice communication systems, computers and special instrumentation. The McDonnell Douglas space slation simulator is a double-walled cbamber, 12 feet in diameter and 40 feet long. It is equipped wilh a 150-cubic-foot airlock for entrance to and exit from the pressurized interior. A partments Given Okay . If Parking V1iderground Underground parking proposed for two separate apartment complexes i n downtown f{untington Beach ronvinced planning commissioners to allow extra aparbnents on both sites. When Lindborg was qulzred by · Duke he said, "I don't want tills on a hardship basis, but because it I! good planning . Look as my proposal and u~ yourselves why no other developer has • cotne Into the area." Although a Cambodian spokesman in Phnom Penh said his government could not approve the allied operation. since State Opposes Newpo11 Man's River Pier Plan Thr. state isn 't hooked on a Newport Beach real eiitate broker's plan to build a fishing pier off the Santa Ana Rive r moulh. Instead of a\lowing Dennis Lynch and his backers to convert the 1,70lrfoot trestle built to help lay a sell.·er outfall into a permanent facility. the state Parks and Recreation Department wants the structure removed . The trestle stretches out on the we st ~ide of the river aCross HuntingtOn State Park and to construct a permanent recreational pier Lynch would need an ,.,..sement from the state Parks and Recreation Department. Joe Benson of the Army Corps of Engineers today revealed the state parks dena.rtment'~ objedion. In a letter sent to both Lynch and the Corp5 of Engineers, stale par\is authoriUes 5ald•>.tfle private pier would be against ·their '11ong-rang~ development plan~ for maximum public u,se of the beach." The letter cites parking problems already in existence at the beach and stales that to b:ate a control entrance (SH PIER, Pace 11 Buikler Leonard Lindborg v1as granted permission to build the two 22-unit apartments as long as he provides su!· ficient parking for guests. Santa Ana Hearing sos;o,N (UPI) -Jµd .. James· A. Boyle, refuting sworn tesUmony ~ F.dward fl-{. Ke•uedy, s~ys , t·b-e Massachusetts. senator was taldhg Mat1"' Jo KopeChne down a road that le~ onli to a ·secluded beach the night she drown- ed. Ke'Jnedy says he had bee11 taking Mi~ Kopechne back to drop btr off at her motel. Ae rejected "the lnfe!en(.-ts a°nd ultimate finding or the jude_'s report" as not "justified." Boyte, in his findings on the celebrated case, said Kennedy probably was driving. negllgently. He left open the matter of whether criminal Charges might be. ssed -although £urthcr action ap-· a red unlikely. - Miss Kopechnc, 281 a former secretary for Sen. Robert F. Ktnnedy, dniwned ~·hen Kennedy's auto went off a bridge· at ChapP;aqulddlck l1la!1l:J, Mass ... l the night of July 18, 1969. The test.lmony and Boyle's findings at the blqutlf, in Edgarltlwn from Jan. M 'were made public , Wednesday.• . · · , · 't , 1 • Kennedy, in. his te!Umony, said he was taking Miss' KoJ>e'.cl;m9 ·back lo her motel roqm l.!l Edgll(tOwn w1"'ri be made a wrong turn and Wen~ 7/J~ of a mile dOwn the wrong told1 -the road that ltd across a w~ btldie spanning a Uda!' pond. The ' abtD, with J\ennedy ' STOCK MARKET · . . ~EW Y\)"R!< (AP) ~ 1)lutock ,inarket cor\tinued Its downward drift this. itfter· noon after an early morning ralty' railed lo aairi .support..Tr~dlng was slow. lSee quotations, Pages 32-33). Declines out!)umbe.red advance~ by a small m&rgln. Earlltt, adv~! had been ahead by alinoit. £our tll one. Lindborg's two pieces or downtown property are at the' comer of Pecan Avenue and 16t~ Street, and on the voest side of 15th Street, south of Pecan. Current z.onJng Jaws allow only 12 apartment u:njls on each parcel. Fish Cancer Probe O'pens "I think he has squarely hit the nail on tbe head at what we're trying to do downtown," Roger Slates. chainnan of !he C{)mmWlon, exclaimed at the Tuesday night meeting, Qt.her commissioners agreed. pro- clnim!ng underground parking as one of the best soluUons proposed for the downtown area's tight parking situation. The city is considering massive revWons Jn zoning ordlnanees aoYe.mlng the downtown are.11, lncludin1 higher density for apartmentt: wblch can provide their own parking. The changes, however. have not been adopted. Only Commissioner Henry Duk'O op;- posed the condlllonal exception,· m1ln- laining that such exception!! should only he granted for hardship circumstances 11 stated In the ordinance. ( Expert.s began testimony thls.imornlng 'in Santa Ana at an emeraency meeting of the House Subcommittee oil Fisheries and Oceanography on the evidence or cancer and other aboormallUes in · £!Sh caught off the Orange Coast near the mouth of the Santa Ana Rivel', In opening the session, Rep_ Richard T. llanna (0-Westminsterl said. "we as a nation cannot afford to remain ia:norant or the relationship between 1altr poU\4Uon, fish disease and th! effect on humans of eating diseased or lnfecled £1sh. "There are those who say lhat slnct no clear and convincing link bel"'een fish Illness and human Illness \u1s been Yroven it Is folly to pursue the. Issue. disagree. llumun health ls at stake. "I &ql appaUed 1t the acknowled1ed dearth of lnrormaUon available and research being done on the erfect (is:1 disease may have on human health. Answers must be found as · soon ~s possible to remove Ulis potential threat." Jlanna's alarm was backed vigorously by the first witness, Dr. Bruce Halstead of the World Life Research lnsUtute in Colton. Ht told or a "dramatic, classical ex· ample" of more than )00 people .. sub- jected to fish poisoning In 1951 a\ fl.1inam11.a, Japan. • "Ovtr one-third of the!t people died and of the balonce half suffer«! !llsabllr.a slcttncsses. "l was called 1n alarml~t al lhe Ume when I 1uggcsted the posslblllt)' of the same thing happening ln the U,S. "AdmJttedly no one can say .thal. diseases from eating fish are the direct cause of human cancer but re5'!at;chers believe it ·Is possible. · It Is a valid question which deman"5 an al)!lwcr. ·• The hearln& was to eoollnue throughout the day In 1he supervisors meeting room In Sant.I Anl with more U\an a dozen \tttnesses ICheduled to be htard. In tQe Sant.I Ana bt1rlng1, °"' eicpert Is scheduled , to IUIUy on bthalf o! tlle Oran;e •County SahltlUon Dl!trlcts to Indicate his btllt! thtre b no aolid link between sewage outt1lb and can- (.'\.ro\IS Ush. He is Charles T. Mitchell, prMident !See FISH, P1,. II 11 the 'wheel, -·....: ... , ........ IaDded uplido -·· jilllf,. II 2 I ..., the girt t , , '\'. Boyle ~ ·"'"~ ~ lhet ~ oot In the te!ttmony to bock Illa ,,...,. Kennedy and Miss K~ did 11111 inteiid to go to Edgartoym, incltxlinc: -Mb• Kopechne ten her """'" • •I the cottage where she and Kennedy had been attendlrig 11party for Kennedy friend.s · and "boiler room" girll who had worked ln the Robert Kennedy ca.m- paip. incillding Mlss Kopeclme. -Miss Kopeehne did not 1sk her room- mate at the motel for Uie ke)' to the.ir room before leavlng ,tbe party. -Thi! ferry that crossed from Cha p- paQulddlck J.lsland to EdgartoWn stopped at midtugbt, and 06 special atrangemtnll for a later crossing had been made Boyle ' said "I infer a reasonabie •llKI probable explanation of the totality oC the above facts is that KeMedy and Kopechne did not Intend t.o return to ~gartown at that time; that 'Kennedy did not intend to drive to the ferry slip Ind h!s turn onto Dike Rcfad . w.iis lntenUnnal, Having reached this con· cluslon, the questlo 11 then arisei as to • whether there Was anything 'crlmlnal Jn his operation of the motor vehicle .•• "I therefore find tl'lert is probable cause to believe that Edward M. Kenntd1 operated hls motor vehicle neillgenlly on a way or in a pJace to which the public have a right of acceaa and that such operaUon appears to have con- tributed to the death or Muy. Jo Kopechne." . . Kennedy, i,n a .statement issued lhrough his Washlngtoo office, sa!Cf "At the in- quest, I truthfully answered illLquestlons asked of me.. In my personal view the inferences and ultimate finding oi IS.. KOPECHNE, hie 11 Oraage Ceut Sunshine Is the. order of the day for Frid~. with temperatures in the shimmertna ?O's alone the coast and t.\P to 1 sizzling IO d& gree, further Inland. ' INSIDE TODl\Y The "cable cor 11qmed detirt:' rolltd Hp (O a f50,000 paJ/0/f for the oirl who lost mort than .... htart in SG" lirandico. Set Par11 4. (llifl.nlll • -,.G (llfdlllle u, ' -·-,,_ ... M•t1 ............... •• ,~ .. " ==· : --" Dtttll Ntlkfl .. ,_.. .... l"lflllrltl ...... • """..,._..au ~~ttm-... 1 n.n T-• 't::"" U·!i \,,..., . ., H K•" -. ·~ .._ ........ ...,,. 1.:1• I ' ' 2 DAILY PILOT H 1"""", ~I :!ii, 1910 N e·wp,or~1 ·' s •MagelleD' Arrives . \ Hom · .. ~_.,. •• e t A ""'"'I -fl\ll~ JNO!b1 a tacUd II Ill de!linalloa bf1ldl the Cap-to '*1 Ill~"'°"" IJ1d ipoutln( Allot -fM Ille -IOdly, live lllD'1 llll, near Stal S..ch. llttboatf lie bis ntum. ·• • )'Ollt ... ,...,,, -liMlll!* -Hll fll'~. 11r. and )lrL Lylo "ll'o ~I """ yun," Nld bJ ... -llM'1 .... -all« GralMni, '4 11. .,.....,.., Rold,. hll ..... , •iadlr t ~ _...,,, be .t~• tt cu1.-the oeew of N...,.n ..... -. wUh hla 11111'1 " 11111 Ill* ~ · qrth, . ,._.. wllo Pllll, a -, U.. ""fJ , !Mr, fl! !llllllJli If""' I '5 Robin L. Gnhun, U, 1111neuv'"4 his sailor lnlvtd. '1111 ~ ..i --.,..t*f l-+-'----llMIM<Oot..t--lloorlldu~Do6-to-He mttlrwlf< eld! moat 11ocmd the,_ lllh; .. -iholr..,. lloop, a berth at Long Beach Marina, after the world -in different w1y1 -tO the Joven~ta. whleh ~1et aail at down -i.. lie oould do whit they aald find adv(ll~ .01\b' to 'find .. ~· olbtr to escort the Ret11n1 of the Dpye to' I I CiMl!dil' iie·~ by• b\>y. in Sq\ljh Africa.. .. ,. lls n~Ung Place. · Me wu 11 when he began h1I odyssey. Tbey were married )n Australia. Gra'bam, Who set 'ialf Julf'lS, l!liSS, The JOUftltll man ever to aall alone Gr~, who first conceived of his went lbrough four calS u companiqns uound the world was p<eted wtlh a monllllttl!W voyage while Ille !..nily aM IWo tailhoall in the 33,IJl».mile ~ m -• 1111 bllland uDhoal Uved Jo 81~1111 .wil porhapo loo llrtll adveelW'e, . II! wlllch dellll wu near ' " """' Pqe J FRE EWAY ... llurlit repllecJ. ''OJI« I queslloeed the rul ooed w I~ but I dao1 have much doubt -\t DO!'· You cu 10 doWn "'>' dV .... the med. And lllll'• oot·just Joco1 tnlfJc .lhe,.; ll'• throu&h traffic." . Tllo lo......, cao81deret1 the freeway pllni" loo lar al<N to malle 1 <hange. ''My rucUon ls that ll be 11 successful ln ellmlnttlog the freeway al ,Beach Boultvllllt·aad Adams Avenue on south, I aee ~ ,..._,for lhe COii! Frt<way fnim ibU -POrlll. "ll ""'Id -· .._....... avrlace street pnilll•a," 8'fte «mtin~ ''You • -· ..... -3t .... lhe Coot Pr<ewv both dumping beacllgoers al that polnt.:It would fn&ke no sense." City Encine<r Jlarjge pointed oul lhat &Ulte DMllon of J:lilbway1 studies wouJd ~ wt>oQier Badbaln'• reroulinl would -1<. "I Wal: 1r1 nectSH11 lo hive a fretw•Y in aome places along the cout.'' Tnlflc ftlli-Coot Mid: '1Jt lboundl to me like Jt would m~an J>Ullinl· Ill the tr,rfjc .. •Roult 3t and the San Dlqo free,,.111 which already haft llN'!' ~jected trllllc volumu of Mro.n. "You can take a link out of the 1y1tem nd all ,.. oeoaa>plllh II to overlead Ibo •Q1ltla. U W9lld dioke up Ille olher ,,.. . .,.,., . Coot allo JIOIDW. out ll!ll Ille state hu .,..i.od 1'111111 of way alon& the beidll1oqt ud --BollltvlD'd f'!f .. ~.,.. 'Ille trllllc engloeer agreed with Burke that the idu. would overburden surface -· "I don't lcoow wl\at ll would do to A«tama Avenue, Hamilton Avenue and Cout tllihway lrlffic into Costa M•a and !I~ Buch. 'Ille bri41es tbore at1 0 ............ 1tweekenda." """' Pqe J PIER .-... lo the pier would bl "lmpraclicll." • "'J'be ,._i would .i.,w;ve the public of .much needed bu.ch area," Lynch wu loi<I, . The· letltr refers to an agreement by tho OrU!le Cowlty Sulllllon DIJlricl Qlf the state to allow construcUon of the trestle for the ·1ayhtg or the sewer outfall but 4loo stipulating lllll Ille sllle 1Ullt bl rat.ared and the trestle taken -wllen the -k is CO!l\Pleted. 111e loltar Concludes by uying tt wishes lhll ..,......... lo he honored. Beman aUd tblt the stf.te parks' ob- j--Ille ooly '"1e lhe corps receiv· ed. 11Molt af the clUes that contacted us simply~ -. Information." lemOn ..Id Ute nnt move ii up to Lynch. "He must pnvlll UPoll lhe s(Jle poru ~ and try lo 1et them to c:blnp their minda." Lynch could not bl reached lod1y to WI ol 11111 1tr1le11. Drug Lahelipg Backed W ASHlllGTOll (UPI) -'Ille American Modlcal -lloa (AMA) W-ay endoned a pl'OjlOAI IOCIJlirilll · 'evt'J' ~ ..,,,, bf libeled -!Iii. acieotiflc. ar pnerte, n1me aft.et being told Ille provllioa mllht have losoeoed Ille Tballdomlde lrqedy. DAILY PILOT ouNIE CtrloST PUM',ISMING COMP'AH'I' It•~" N. w.,d ~ ..... ... ., ...... e..t.., VlllJ Prn»1111 _. ~I MINltt• 'nlo111•• Ktt•il 1•11w , .......... ht1rplih•• MIMtlrnl Edllor Alb.rt W, l1t11 AMdltt ldl!W ................ , ......... - 17175 lffc:~ le11l1v11d Matlh1t .Ydrtu l P.O. 111 790, 92641 --~ 1ouct11 m .._. •-c.i. Mfttl m '#ell l.t'I' Str"t "'---' .. ac111 m1 wnt .... , '°""""',.. ... CJll!ltlltl1 :au N..-tll El '-W. "-••I ' -- • 539· Set Sail Fle et Off · to Ensenada .Under briaht, aunny ski•'• and light soulhwesterly winds; a JIHl ·of catamaran1 ·led NII uiling yachl1 off Newport Jla!l>or al lhe atrol<e of noon ~Y in lhe start of lhe 23rd annual NeWJJOrj· Elll-6 yacht race .. . Tbe anticipated field of 565 was cut to 539 at lhe starting gun as 31 craft dropped out. Boats llarted streaminr oqt of lhe jetty at 10:30 a.m. beading for the dual starting lines ou· the Balboa Pier. The cats went off at llQOg •IWP 111jlh IJ>r•'l'ither division• following at 10 minute inter-vals. . -T Tile llr1t boell ·will start •rriving in Eosenada, 125 nautical miles away early on Friday. The complete list entries (including the dropouts) will be found on Page 8 of loday's DAILY PILOT. ' Mesa Hospital Worker Stabbed; Janiwr Held · A houatkeepv at a Costa Men con-vaie~t .h:.Pttal was atabbed in. the ba~ five tirnU following a quarrel with a fellow employe Wedoead1y. A If.year· old janitor draped the attacker off. ~rs. Virginia Kerby, U, head oouse~r •l lhe facility 11 Z05S l'hurio Ave., wu l~ted in aerlous condition to4aY at C~stp Me:sa Memorial Hospital. She suffered a collapsed lung ia the early lllemOon hour •llaek. ~ Sculeri, 53, ol lllS Costa Mesa SL, Costa Mesa, was arrested and booked fot investigatiQn of auauJt wilh tnie.nt lo -.nil mun1..-~i~r the •ltor<allon. DelloUve Ll-l Hal P'l9cher ••lcl &:uteri was cooperative and nmorse!ul afkr the incident, apparently stemming fro~ a1 argument over Ml'I. Kerby aiding with hil ex-wife in ' court case. - InvesUa:ators pjecJne togelbtf wbf;t oc. Qln'ed in lhe storeroom al Ille Bayview Convalescent Hospital said Mn. Kerby argued with SCuterJ and turned to leave. The events were wltnuted by janitor Elmer Lee, ~. who said he heard the conversation between victim and IUSpeCt. "Whe• she lumed, Sculeri pulled a knlre out of his pocket and stabbed her in the back," Lee told police. Mr1. Kerby, of 501 Orangethorpe Ave., Anaheim, collapsed into a chalr and Lte said Scuterl fell upon her again. Lee aald he grabbed Scuteri rrom behind and dragged him away from the bleeding bead housekeeper, allowing her to 1e1 oul of the crowded quarter&. f nJm Page J KOPECHNE. •• the fudge's rtpOrt are not jusUfied and I reject them.· "Tlie lac:ta . of lhlo Incident are now fully public/'' he ad~ed; "ud eventual judgment ~. updentand!ng reals where il helonp: r.r mystll I plln DD further ltatement en this track matter. Both our families have auffered enougb from public utterances apll speculations." In his rinding•, Boyle did nol bring up the question cf why Kennedy waited some nine houri before reporUng the accide11t to .Edgartown police. Leslie H. Leland , ll>e lo~an of lhe llutt9 Counly Gr.00 Jury, which on April 7 ended a ·whirlwind probe ol the accident without returning 111 in- dicbpent, said there was a "po&a;bility" oJ l-econveoin1 ljle jury a)lhougll he 1*Jn't '~dered it yeL" ·Leland will have lo mlll<e up hil mind by May 11 when a new grand jury is &elected, althoujh theoretically J10thing would Bland ill the way of the new jury llkln1 up the ,,,., "He stabbed me," 1be mumbled, 1tag- gerln1 toward help. · A group of elderly 1adle1 sang "How qreat Thou Art,'' in the boapltar lotmge ai nurses admln11tered ftrlt •Id to the badly woonded woman. "Scuterl was sitllng ln the storeroom saying : 'l'm sorry. I'm sorry,' " the janitor explained. F ro11a Page J FISH ... of Marine Biologlcal Conau)tanls, Inc., of 4ll'/ E. Bay 51., Coeta Mna. In prepared leotlmony to lhe con> nultee, Mitchell declartd, "The oc- currence of fishes wUh anomalous growtlu: or diseue in arus of wute discharge (both' in~u.strial and ®"'estic) is by no means a recent~eveDt. Such fLtlet have been collected u early as 19= in San Fr•ncisco Bay. The California Department of fish and game has documented the problem since 1956 in the L<>s Angeles area. "Similar reports can also _ bt jound for British Columbia,. Wuhinpxi,t.Loog Beach l'.lnd San Diego. The eiacl etiology of these abnormal growths ~ lesions on fishes in ; these •rea1 ietnaloa a mystery despite the work of many in- ve~gatot'I. Histological rtudies have in- di cated these papilloma are not malla- nant but probably caused by mechanical, chemical or in!eclioo1 irritation. "The occurrence of these fishes i.t- not Umited to areas near domestic discharges; fishes exposed to 3 to 10 pe"Ceot dilutiOQS of water from Dorrun. gues Channel Jn Los Angeles Harbor developed lesions within 12 days and many died even after removal to clear water. "Jn the course of our present bioloaical survey ,re have made 24 separate be!)thic trawls . (in 'Auguat and November, 196i and F~bruary 1970) wlUtln I miles o( th~ present Orange County Ocean Outfall. Almost 1.000 fiabes have been captured representing 42 species. "About one-half of these fishes have been captured within 100 yards ot the outfall. Approximately S percent of these fish exhibited either papjlloma or lesions on the finl. All were white croak~r,, a fish oot tmerally used £ew con- 11t1mptlon. Of lhi1 ,total .approifinately 26 individuals had papilloma. Two dover sole have been captured with papllloma, bot.i1 collected IOP'le di&tence from the ootfall. 1 " "The pre1tnt 1urvey, under way since August Hiit, will not only supply background data for the outfall u n d e r construction but will also monitor changes in the area of the exlsting out/all after its operation bas ceated." Westminster Schools Plan New M~tivation Program Beii\lllllni ""'l scllool year. about 110 nlnlll graden 1t Wetllnillller Hllh School will participate in 1 curriculum tr· pertmenl desll"ed to improve moliVlllon and l••mlnc. 1'1t'1 caUed a .. pont0on cunic\lhrm.'' HJ1latned Or. Marvin M1rahall, the odlool'• usilllnl princlp<I. ''The Ideal !nlllluilon ..,..Id allow eech student to progns1 1t hl1 cwn rate. Thl1 ii on lllemPI In lh1l dlrecUon. Hence the term "pontoon," a tempor1ry brldft,'' Marab1ll u ld. The experimenl wUI lnvOl\'11 Ille_ olnl<> lurinJ ol four clwts In ooe block of time to illow large group lecture, small group dlacuoslon, $1udent Moring and directed study through lhe help or a teaching aide, he said. Cls• length and alze "'°'-tld be com- pletely ne1iblt, allowing the fcur teachers to organize their timt more effic iently. accordln1 to Dr. Marshall . If the aperlment ii iucctssful, he prndlcttd, there wlll be 1 reduclion in dropouts, improvement of attendance, atUtude and educational, achievement al U~. ol Pynmld Head, lhe bland'• IOltlheni Hia inlUIJ b\>!l, the , ,U-!Gj>( llo'<t. Up. ' Iii-=· lllo Vf~f!: $1':'1~il:.~ ~-'''~"".... t,.:: '"'; .. -llolll'lilll, . tllft. . . ~ llland In Ille Jn4Jan Ocwl. orul tlif,l/.I. !»all Guud·h<Od' llWIY lllGn! he uf)ll1ene<d c11naer 1re. ....,....._ . .lltactr~Wedoesdl)' ~quMUj. tr-- afternoon that he wa.5 ifiboond -fron\ • PerhsPI the worst wu a ~ o(f Ii)• 1'il'orld / '-' Ind llO -rilUio ioulh or . Durban, South Africa. . • , • San ..9si'.i!nle, boa I ani sj>IJjll .l!! art•! _ :'.~ . wu te'1b-_wom.O.'~ 1ald • .llla sbipe. father, "tbe waves broke the port light Naviptors at the llth Coast Guard and flooded the fPalde. l'hin13 w;ere Qy. llfatrlct beadquarten bl !Ao& Beacb plok ing all ovc Ille bOaL He jllat prayed I • • • te4 hia poatUon<laW al five mllu oortb . jllll prayed. • :• • ( ., I . r ./. . . 'near Pr~b~~~ -~~II . ·Salvi.,;.' • . . The journey reminiscent of renowa Sir Francls Chioester'a transocea.nlc sol ..,,_ .......... 411-"' -Cape ol Good llopo loo. Ho Ibo -llllo Ille llemlawepl In-dian Ocean at 2 a.m. one time, to retrieve .a broken tnlfl and on anotbei' ~&Uift. .lhe-sm811-uaft wU nearly .. run down by a towering frejghter. Buldea the faCt be wUI ,become a father in Julf,· almOst on' th~ fifth an· niversary of his start, Graham's futur~ is uncertain. -:t. He is a high school dropout, but tw:"r,• an educallon dtoied IDOel hUIDIJl heiJ111. . .. ·Wilcoxen . Blllsts Schm.itz . , ... Jfu1n;1n ·~wait 11 p:>lluUna Orwe '"111!1 lae\Jd a "'erY ASQiaUe aub~J'' C~li . aet• and verbal atwaae II \Vlloo'!ft , ''.but tilt~ "" vicqljilill wiJulJ\li Orao1e Coun!y's a\m011fiim of ,Ule waler cr,uallly oonlrol llaodmll In the race for U.S. Congress, candidate • throughout tbJs dittriCt. ·we baw 1o William WUco~en charced Tuesday in: take 1evere miaaw:es .• ·.,tbft •we will AHsslon Viejo. • .. · not llirlher pollute the ocean. The polJu. The 37·y~aMld Laguna Beach attorney · · tlon Js already occurrtn·g. '1;'hli pl'ob1el'n spoke bef~e cU.~z~ at . Missloil \'.l'ejo may take f~al alsiftance to solve." . ll!p• ~t hl!lilis 1 variety or \OPle> iii the ma ol ·edtJF1tlqo· the lither in a qu~~-uswtr seulon r af. of'fOUf' q1d till rtCQl'd ii .J. of IUPPOfi lerw'!"' • . '!Cl' 4ducaUotl. Ht 11id bl baa beta He ._ It'~! candldale <Jiocerne6 hocaoie the proporl)t 118 ill• Sllle See:, JObn G. lldimllz (!\-Tustin) -.0 mare IDd ·m.re uaequllable for in the lil'll IO\llld ef lhe nlghl while aehtol l!noocln(. · lo~· ~r m•!\ell la relallon ·lo :Ji1.a11d •he ·lltllel'e• Iii llb1rla1 will his -t. "· he·lnmllinc on·thO 01Uona1·1eve1 •11nl:e "We don't ~·. r~taUon ttiat tmcatioft ii our cowitrr11 chief defeme. Is Ued lo !Nil~ ldoo~.''.mn~ -<in~ llluo' lit.voiced dlullllf..,_ the ·GO!' caoillaAle wllo ' Calls bbm;U· · · . . ' • . a Q>iueJ'Vltlve. . Hoa-th.at Congre1s baa lost coot.rot· ct~·. lhe _.iing luncUoo. .: ."Rule by executive order instead or·'. Congreuional control bas aotten out cf hand." he said. He promised to bring··. fiscal respc_>~ibility ~ to the Congress..·, "What this district needs is a responsi·"· ble cqnservative rniresentative," said WJlco1en. He .aaid he could fill this • role better than bis , principal opponent.· in Ille Republlcao primary, Sllte Seo. Schmitz. .. "He muque"r_ades as a conservative·." yet he helon11 lo ll>t John Bird! 5oclety .. .' an organization that has attac~d· · Republicans from President Uncoln to President Nixon: Thia Issue lhould not · a:et away from us in this election." · ·" "We have very real problema lo 10lve, •• he add.ed, .-charilns lhll hll opp<Hl!nl in the race to-replace ·~ late· Congressman James B. Utt (Jl.Tustln) hun't concerned hlm!tlf wltb them. Discussing publlc property uae, Wiicox· ·Los Alamiws Puts Curb ·· en cl\eif hla oym Save 5alt Cretk cam· palgn and i>ralled Orau1e County, authorities for taklnl new steps to guarantee public beach actlll up and down the coast. He dlrcuned his propolal far the formaticn of a Santa Margirtta, National Park which would include pirt of cieveland National Forest and the northerly areas of Camp Pend1eton: "'I1lls area lends ltsetr to national park :status. 1 think It should seriousl y be considered since il could be used oo a 12-month basis." He moved to an environmental pro- bletn, ooe that faces this district, that oI proper H:wage treabnent. l\1IRV Curb Defeated,· WASHINGTON (AP) -An eijor< lo swpind part <1f. the 1.1.s. ·Ml.llV r11uclaar warhead buildup -Wbk:h oppoMnta aald could wreck the U.S.-Soviet dilarmamenl lllill -baa been defeated by the Houae. On All Air Base Zoning '1bt Loo . .\l•l!lllol Naval Alf 5l1Uon b et1ll the 1pp1, of rvtr)'One'1 eye, hut Ille city nl Loo AlunJto1 hu acted to -insure that no othtt ·aleney takes an imporper bite out of it. Tuesday night, the city c o u n c i I formalized an emergency Qrdinance pus· ed in February freezing all zoning on the naval air station. "It simply means that no development is possible on the air staUoo if it becomes a non· federal piece of property. This . gives us ttme to ltudy the area and see what We'd like to do with it," City Manager William Kraus expla~ today. WIJen·., ttie federal ·· government····~ nounced it would phase out the ·1,300, acre alt statlop, i&fncles ·from lta.te level dnn · ttirougti county and city ... sharpened their knives to carve up the figurali'(t· apple. f The big fear of resldenll Ihm 1': lllal 0r"l!ge County mlgbi replace the. naval air 1laUon with a ~vlllan airport.:,. "We certainly don't want that," Kralll. said. _ ._,, Los . Alamitos city officials have declared that because the air station ~­ is In their city, it should be lheir property .... when vacated by the Navy. . Federal authorjties have not said wtvJ) will ge~ it. .. ;'We also haven't learned exadly wbe~' the air station, or parts of it will be · turned ov~r to other agencies," Kraus·~ added. The city . stuay of the station i1 e1· : pected to be complete in abaut three· months1 according to Kraus. He aaid ' s0me -cf · 'tlie' pOssiblJltles for tts Use include, "parks and open space, w· dustrial · development and perhaps a. 1 reglo~ shopping center.'' BIGBEDR - n; f--' ii.11tn ""''* ybu'd hJIKt t• ·-much, ftluch ftlOrll Save on elegant triple dresser ~s ~y Lenoir House SEE OUlt ,Ull ,40E AD IN ,AMIL Y WEEKLY -MAY 2 . . PROFESSIC~ .J. GAR REIT f.U_RNITU RE 2215 HARJOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR CESIGNERS Opto """" ,._ • ft!, ...... . 646°0171 ""'0276 . ._.) ... . --·--··-·------------c------------- • ., \ I "" ire .;,. .,, .. · ... ot< of •!!"· ~·. Si···. lid iis ~ mt. ltl, Ii.' !If- "'- '" I I ' ,. ' ty,·· 1~; !d . ,.. 1:!"" .. ~· i\I . ;e n'. ·-· ' • .. ' . ·-·-' I: 1( f ' •• Goldwate1· Cheered At Cal State By JACK BROBACK ... Of .... DltW l'IW lllft Senator Barry Goldwater met the dlsaldent.s -and more than 3,000 other Interested Cal State FuDerton students and staff members-Wedne&day. Th«e were QO riots, only a few catcall's and lnterrupUons, and mueh appla.uae. Sen. Goldwater arrived on campus at 12 :30 p.m., a half hour late. He apologized, saying headwinds held up his plane. }{e spoke without notes for about 20 minutes and then answered questiona for about 45 minutes . The dlssJden~bout 20 who gathered In the front of the crowd as Goldwater spoke from the balcony or the College Cornmotls dormll«y bulklinf-<beered loudest when the senator said : !'From 1946 to the late 1950s this country entered into 57 mutual protection treaties and 17 of them can for us to go to war. ~t that point, he was interrupted by a ·raucous cheer. "I don't know how to" interpret that," he said' of the yelling. Coldwater continued, "We came out of World War II with a po11Jtion of wOrld leadership, whether we like it or. not. \ \ • IH OAl\.'f I'll.OT :1 ' ... ~ngress·· Gets Nixon I ' . : ' • • Assurance$ : , • · WASHINGTON (UPI) Tbe . White• House privately aaaured PY COl>i gressmen today thllt Pm14•111. Nixon does not lnlend ,to .Involve tha , Uni~ . Sillies In ll ... long-tenn qlllckland opera, lion" in Cambodia. Bui the unsigned ltatement dn:li!Ated ,. on Capitol Hill old the Prellldent fOwld it necessary to send adviton ~ ·arrns tn•.o Cambodia from Vietnam .. to aave American llve.5." The memorandum was circulated tn advance of the President'• speech to the nation tonight In wblcb he will ... k to allay fears tha: the allied thrust Into Cambodia may wldm the -In southeast Asia. , -The memo said that Communllt ,_, have 'jenormowdy lncreaaed" their hostile 'acUvttJa. In Camhodla and lllat to igni.n them "would, pretent an open American Dank to the ~my." . "This 11 not a long-tam 'qulcband' operation that-would . lead to • new · •vte~ situation' in Cambodia, ... the Jetter laid. 'ilt ii a strike oJ>el'aUon tbat 1s an Integral part of aur CJ!!Or!Jl!On• ·tn Vietnam. It is not in teply to any of (Ca mbodian Premier) IA!:' No1'1 re· quests for aJd to Cambodia." Noting that .. Salgm Is only ~ miles from Cambodia," the statement said "this effort to clean out •the Many will result in a aavin11 of American • lives." ' "The question now before us is whether we can retain that world leadership. It is a simple question, even you can answer iL .. It is wbttber we want to live In a world domlna~. by !lavery or a world dominated ~y flledom." . OAILY "ILOT ~ "° • "Only !he President has all the·!ada · on this situation," the Whtte HOlllll memo 1 saJd. 1'He must act in what he CODllderl to be the best bitereoll of our C00111rJ Leader . of the dilSideoll waa Jim . SENATOR GOLDWATER ANSWERS QUESTIONS FROM AUDllNCE AFTER HIS TALK WEDNESDAY AT CAL STATE FULLERTON and our troops," • Clealr, cbaiimon ol the Student Mobillza· tion CommJttee at Cal State Fullertoo. He had hl1 face pajnted and a large American flag •painted on hls back, with a few obscenities lnsc:ribed on his arms. At one point, while Goldwater was answering questions from the audience, Cleair tried to gain access to the balcony. He was held off for a time by student leaders and when he did confront Goldwater he invited the senator to sup- port the student defense fund and sold him a copy of a magazine with nude pliotos of radical leaders, male and female. The senator paid '2 for a copy. MDM Vows to Be 'Ready Next Time' The letter, written on White Ho.lie 1 stationery, sai 1f Communist acUvlty in Cambodian aanctuarie1 were Ignored It would "jeopardize the onUre South Vietnamese o~aUon" and "affect our ability to continue our withdrawal" At' one point during the question and a11SWer period, Bob Sandoval, student body president, toot the microphone to 68.y, "There is a small segment on ~ campus trying to tell the entire 1 •tudent body what to say and do." Sandoval was roundly cheered by most of tbe audience. He was referring to the catc.alls of the dissidtnta: duriJl&. the question period. Here are some sample questions and Goldwater's answers: .Q. Why do we have to bt a world teader? By JOHN VALTERZA said they have drawn a blank on clues. Of 1ttt1 Dell' "'"' •••tt "We don't have a car, a description "They all call us a violent organization, of subjects ..• nothing but a dozen spent but we don't go around spraying machine cartridges from a weapon," one detective guns into peop(e's houses," Paul said, sald Wednesday afternoon. gazing at bullet holes in the buff stucro The group of a dozen or so members house in Oceanside. of the MOM in the house at about The youth, wearing bushy sideburns, the same time, however, say that their frizzy hair and a button with Che assailants are Marines. Guevara's portrait in red and black The group's allegations come from pot1ted out shattered windows, a bullet-their obviously unpopular cause& on the chipped sidewalk, then vowed, "We're sprawling Camp Pendleton Marine base arming ourselves now, and wfi'll be ready -unpopular among the offictr&, but to protect ourselves next time.'' growing in popularity among the The first time occurred about midnight "peops," on~ MDM member claims. Tuesday when, three men drove In front Race riots on the base last Feb. It <it the headquarters of the Movement we~ blamed by the Marines on the fer a Democratic Military (MOM) and MOM grotip, the Studenta: for a opened up with a machine gun. OemocraUc Society and the Black The burst of a dozen slugs ripped Panther Party. through the front of the residence and The MDM SJXlkesmen charge that one shot hit a Marine before he could the Corps has blamed them wrongly for t.reu Jane Fonda -Ues. "We have some pretty reactionary neighbors ," Paul sald as he hunkered on the front lawn. 1 "They are almost all old people who have just paid off the mortgage and are obviously scared to death. "We have a couple of long-haired neighbors next door, but that's all," he added. Obviously the neighbors have a right to their fear. A doi.en bulleta: pointed that out the other night, and now that the victims have anned them.selves and set up "security" at the house around the clock, the tenseness of the situation is obvious. And the MDM movement now has Its martyr. The MDM leaflet heralding tonight's rally says : "Brother Jesse was shot down because he stood up to speak for and to the people who are belng persecuted by the military ... when first put on the stretcher Brother Jesse shouted 'all power to the people'." But not all the wrath or the MDM Is aimed at the military. Civilian police are equally to blame, &everal members said as thiy pondered what to do about a broken mimeograph ma chine. "They and the military work hand·ln- hand. You can't have oppress!On 1n the military without cooperaUon from the police," one member said. But the shooting pointed out one ln- comlstency -moments after the vigilante ca r sped off into the darkness 50rneone In the house made a phone call for help. They called the police. Earlier,& RepublJcan Rnator predicted that on the basla of a talk with Defeme Secrelary Melvin R. Laird that Nbon'a use of Amerlcao for<H would . l>e on "a very limited bu.ls." Sen. Rober! J. Dole (~.) ald he dlacuaaed the llitutloa wtlb 1.alrd Wednelcby nlghl ' Dolt said ol U.S. involvement: •As I understand it, we're taUdnc : about a two, three or four week period. then there·s the beginning of the rainy oeaaon and everytblnc will bog ~ But It's goiq to be tou&h for a few weeks." Gets Cowpiracy Rap NEW YORK (UP!) -CarlO Ganibbi, the alleged "boss of bosses" of all ·Mif1a families, wu indicted Wednesday on charges of coMpiring to tujack an armored truck transportlns: millions of dollars in cash. A. We got Into World War II because . we were weak. HJUer would never have atarted the war if we haft been strong. Q. (From a girl) What are we going to do to Insure the rights of' the majarity versus the rights of the militant minority? hlt the floor . inciting the violent disturbances. "It hit brother "Jesse (Woodwlird) in "We will not be in t i mt d ated,•' 1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-;..;·.--.-.-;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;, the arm, ·then went into his chest. The spokesman Tom Hurwitz said In a A. I agree with the . right of d.i.ssent, but they are doing lt the wrong way, abusing their rights. Ya1e UniversHy won't solve Jt. If I was president of Yale I would close the school. Q. What aboUt 1nvotvement in Cam- bodia? A. We should send no anned forces but could supply them with sman arms and ammunition. Q. What is your opinion of the young people today? A. This is the best generation we I have had in our Jives, but we •ill always have some dissidents. \ Q. Why not fight communism here and at Berkeley instead of in Vietnam! A. I am not convinced that these youn1 people down here (the dissent group below) are Jnfluenced by Com· mun Ism . slug stopped about an inch from his prepared statement Wednesday, "Neither heart," Paul explained. the brass, nor the terTorists will stop Woodward, police &aid, was a Marinf; us from comlnulng to fight ror the righta: Corps deserter. He is recovering after of GJs.~· surgery at the U.S. Naval ff91pital. And to illustrate their point, the group other bullets lodged Into walls and a nnounced plans immediately after the ripped through posters h a n « l n g :ihooting for a demonstration at an throughout tbe house. Ocean.side park tonight to protest the One slug first went through the back incident. of Eldri(fge Cleaver's head in one poster, "We expect at least 1,000 marchers," then piwed through a ~ ah<rtivlng one member said with a smile. a clenched fist holding a rifle cOmplete 'lbe rally tonJgbt will be followed by with a slogan about arm in< oneself by "Nine Oays ln May," a aeries of marches Bobby &tale, then whizzed past four in the city protesUna: the same thing, inhabitants of the house., finally to ~ In fact, posters heralding the nine in .t far wall. days served a serve a dual purpose It hlt a poster photo of Cbt Guevara at the MDM house today -to herald in the left cheek before finally stopping. the marches and cover bullet shattered Leads to the identity of the vigilantes windows. -witnesses said they were three in . One obvious worry to the group and nu1 .. ber -number zero. others ts the neighborhood where the Oceanside police, who saj the case MDM house -bought a month ago Is totally · thtlrs, not the Marine .Carpi', and "warmed only last weekend by ac· • . • . I-. • • . J • • • ' • • • -• ' ' ' • ' " ' ' • • • .· ,; n OMEGA,-ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR • rin9s sized and repaired • diamonds •nd precious stonu remounted • pe•rls Tel'trvn9 WE CUSTOM DESIGN·• MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY HA--ClllTll 2JOO HAllOl .. YD. COSTA MISA Ml-Mii ' "The Store Th.I Confod1nc1 Built" °'"" -.. Tllln., .... 1'11 ' ..... HUNTIHTOH CINTU llACll • DlllGll HUNTIN•TON IU.CH 1'1-1101 . . , . . . ' ' . . .. . ' . . ' ' "'' '' ,·. . ' " • • ' • GARDEN SHOP 1$ GOING • • • WILD! WILD! w ·1·LD! . . " SAVE NOW ON iOUR GlRDEN SPECIALS • *BEDDING PLANTS ·44'.::c1r .ALL VAllmlS *DECORATIVE BARK 1 :!i.lt. 144 , *REDWOOD COMPOST *ORTHO LIQUID FERTILIZER MIX •ALLONS OR MATCN *IMPORTED MEXICAN POTTERY fASHION ISLAND SJORE ONLY NEWPORT BEACH • 5 ••• It. 177 2i499 25":, , I I · " I I J ' I __. _____ _ . ·----------. . -------... _ ...... - ' f ijtalv Pl~OT 'r!.nlir;'lprtl '°• 1970 Nixon , Task to ;Calm War E:scalation ,F·ears· I I '1111 --...... •""1 sTlll. tllo. IUddsn sDled mlllllrJ --... ..t • -lo CD!bodis'• pla ,., 1sr,.. scale ~ U1 aplnsl the c;o.it- mUnlil liilopi: -·· ollichll aeknowledaed arq saCccae1 achJeved aplnsl die N.nh v-.-and Vlei Cong f,,,_ would have lhe effeel ol. lesleOlni the tm-UI they pO.ed lo lhe Cambodian .....,._ of Premier Loo Nol, whlcb CUiled prince N- Slhaboulc M dllel o1. .Ule. It -not·cleor -the Presldenl In hlr t P.llL EST I<-uplullllon '""1ld -Just -be hu decided lo dO -Loo Nol'• urgent roqueil "" -ol. ~ ol. -In U.B, mlllary ..._ lo ealsrp ud • CllMlll hll leetile Ud dlsorpilzed army. Whllo--·~­L. ·Ziefler uid Nlrl!D '""1ld "dlicuss U.> eollre llluaU.O In "cam-as 11 refalos bolh lo <lambodia and lo Ila U._S. fOl<OI la Soulh V-.· Thia led aome obtervtn ta believe the Presi- dent mllbl pve rome lndlcalion ol what ls lo be-. either dlreclly ... lndireclly; to fill the Cambgdl~n artn)''I need.a. The Unlled Slolos already ha1 ap. proved tile lhipmenl lo Camlwffa by -Vietnam ol. 4,000 eapCund au.-CommUDllWnade AK47 automatic rilleL ---IMl-Tbe ~ WU upec"'1 lo .,..Ue lllo --· -tbe Cembodlsn border -nol rilk widenln& lhe war 'ul deioJinl Withdrawal of tJ.S. foroff but, on the contrary. wu neceNl1Y lo make certoln tile wllbdi'awals could continue urunolt"'d. , The America-SU-""' ScMJlh \Viet- namese drive came u a ahock to most Con&r<umen, who hrd UIUlllOd Nl%06 would want lo avoid uy '\J.S. lnlervenlion ID Combodla -even In tile «>mbaWup. »ortlal role -loll Honol be lj>Umd lo lnl<nolfled <l!o<V 1brou1bou1 Jndocb!M Admlnlslratloa olfldall -ledpd they were not 1t all certain of the ·•Jgnillcance ol 'llto lonnallon ol a united I-lrtnt proclaimed at ia-. ing earlier this week or No rt h Vietnamese, Communlat Pall>et Lao and Viet Cong represeritatlves rih SibanouJr.. tbis '~lodochineee summit" belitved to have 1-1 held In Nannlng, SOlllh aim., was reported lo have been penonall7 congratulated by Communist O!l-. ~mier ·Chou En Lal. It •lao WU tbl reciP,ent ol a llowins tntsltce ~ ap- proval ·from Sovltt Pmnler Alwl N. Kmygln. I ' ' • • I No Comment By Kopechnes On 'festimony N. Viets Rap U.S! Camho·dia M·ove • I I l ' ' l tc a 1111 W .. 1111111' ,_. ....., ~ HEIGHTS, N.J. (AP) - '!'be paNOll of Mary Jo' Kopeclme ay llloy will defer c:ommeot en on Inquest reporl releaoed In Bolton unW Ibey read it with a lawyer. PARIS (UPI) -Nelrlh V~tiwn ao- cused lhe u~ Sia ... today of 111p. plying material t. Cambodia'• n e w _ regime lo help maaa<re Vielnomeae and Olinese mldentl -lhe flrat menUon of Ollnese deallll ln Caml>odla. ·Nguyen Minh Vy, North Vietnamese ttp1esentaUve to the Vietnam pe•ce lalka accused tilt United Stat<s of extend- ing the war to all of Indochina by providing support for South Vietnamese troops operaUng Inside Cambodia and added: ' Mn. Ado H•l"-11 of Chatham, 1 Ena!IJ!d has p~t a sign on her 1$- moDllM!ld baby'• higbCbair saying, ••no Not Feed Me Goldfish.11 .The went up aft<i the family's PeB3', disappeared from Tbe Kopeclmol aid Wednesday alght Ibey would 10 lo Wlikea Borre, Pa. to COQIU}t with attorney J o 1 e p b Flonlian, who bu n!preaented them In lllo -· MJra Koptehoe WU bonl In Wllka Barre rnd WU burled Ihm lut summer. "This it not to mention the fact that siooe ll lllaged lhe coup In Phnom Penh, StoinJ Ravages Oklahoma Area; 41 Persons. Hm·t I 1 near the infant'• chair. "He bad a fuilly look," said Mrs. Hlllewell, "like be bad awallowed • flsb.'' • Greg JOM1, 10, hil 1UUr Connie, 1, and '1dilhbor TrllCf/ Ptt<mm, 10, all of T•flm, Calif., norlh of Gorman, take )iai advantage of the uMeaaonaE 1pring snow that fell in their front I/Ord and an over the Gorman area t'tcentlJI. TM freak weather closed major arterial highways for several hoar1. • Douglas Dodds.Parker~ a mem· ber of British Parliament, has ask- ed the Defense Ministry if marks- men from the Guards Regim~nt in London can be authorized to aid the City of Westminster's anlipig· eon campaign. • A VoL1u1Dagen bus is parktd fn the living room of a 23rd /lWr dormitorv suitt on the Ohio State University campiu. School of/£. cial.I, contending the enginek11 whiclt ii a fire lword, ·have gr. deed It removed. The '~" baughl lhe 19611-.1.0... fn>tll , o f1i•lq/Grd for $15, dioou~blfd' ii O'lld·mou<d fl pl<c .. bu-J)f<cr up domUtorv tleoctor.s d1tti9'0 th• wtt ho1i1r1 onl'. morning 14.st totek. Flau1an, who was successful in preventltg nhumaUon of Mary Jo's bod.1 for an autopsy late last year, said, •·1 have ordered a copy of the inquest report and tranacrlpt and will have no comment at least unUl after I have read it thoroughly." Flanagan also la representing the J>'Un.la ta a civil action agaiut Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and his insurance flnn ln COMectlon with the auto death. The amount of damages IOught has not been dilclotod. Flanagu declined cornmeal on what effect the inquellt teltln.ony might hav~ on the lawault. Mrs. Kopechne sald on April 10 "it wu an accident, there's no doubt about it" when commenting on a grand jury aesaioa which failed to find uy cause for o1mlnal action agalnsl Kennedy. She Aid at that time that both 1he and her husband looked forward to &eeing II!< 1r.,,.,j;pt, Mra. Kopechne said Kennedy had call- ed htr that week to Inquire ''how we were dotng." She said Keanedy "had the habit" of c~lb1g her during the past aeveral monUll to make similar lnqulOO. OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -Tomadlc winds, hall, torrential rain and one roving twister battered homes, schools, shops and chlJl'ches early today, turning !ilreets. into rivers and seattering can, roots and litter. At least 41 peNIOns were injured by the s~Pm that struck the city for five hours before daybreak. Almost four in- ches of rain flooded 1treets. The stcrm tore roofs olf houses, knock- ed down power lines and left much of Ok1ahoma's largest city without lights, gas or telephone service. More than 100 blocks were damaged along the fadiiooable Quail Creek and Camelot residential sections. One twister skirted town, spreading damage and destnx:tion. A small cam- ping trailer was thrown into one man's living room. Burglar: alarms walled all across town. Dou:IUll of strtets were blocked by fallen trees and debris. Among the injured was the Rev. Davtd Monahan, pri:iclpal at Bishop McGuinnes High School, which was damaged by the screecllin~ Winds. He was treated for """ and bruiaea 11 a hoopli.J. Nympho Colle~ts Cable Car Girl Get,s $50,000 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A buxom ex-Sunday school teacher has been awarded $50,000 damages from a cable car accident her attorney said led her into the anns of 100 men . The eight women and four male jurors deliberated for eight hours before decJdfna Wedneeday oo Ille amount for Gloria Sykes, 29, in hflt suit against the city and ita transit system. Two of the jurors held oot for a $300,000 verdict &nd the final vote was 9-1 • ' She bod aouahl "°6.ooo. but altorney Mirtin Lewis •llll balled the verdict as a "lepl tftakthroo&h'' lfhich esl4l>Usl>ed lhe prlndJl<i ol "piychic dama.ges ... Bu\ he aaid Miss Sykes would need $150,0llO Worth. of JJSY.chlatlic trealment In tbe am ~I yelra and 1ndle1ted he might appeal the amount of the award. Miss Sykes was on a Hyde Street Cable car in 1964 when it broke loose, plunged down a hill and smashed into a power pole. Outing her 2* days on the stand, she told of a craving after lhe accident, for cuddling and "emotional vibrations" -most easily obtainable through sex. "I wanted them to impart to me some of their strength," she testified of her 100 recent loven. "Sy being close to 90D'leone, you receiv~ emoUonal "sustenance." She abo ltstUlecl lhe had a ahtltered upbringing, taupt Sunday stjiool and sang .in her home town chotr tn Dearborn Heights, Mich. She said her college friends used to kid her about beinJ "the world'• only 21-year-old virgin." Thunderstorms Spread Violent Weather' Boils Up in Summertime Heat Codlfortala llOUlHIJIM c:AllFOJINI.\ -S\llWIY '"" lllfMl'f wtrmer Tl!urlod•Y Ind l'r~ dlY. \.totll MfY Ind (ool llOPTI! le llOr!M91t wlllft. LOS ,t,NGELIS .\ll;l.\ -Sun11y ..W 1ll9hf1¥ Wlmll'I" Tll\IAdlY 1nd l'•ldlr, L9ctlh' wkidY ti.low u~. Lowt Miii 111totlt1 ""' SD. Hl9h Tl'lur'S(l11 15. Hlell 1'11c11Y In 11-7h. ~NT CONCEPTIOtf TO "IE)(ICA"' eC>JICClt-Mllttr lltlll v1rilt>I• Wlndt """' ... ~ '*"' btcomlflt W'lillll1'r " ,. " bllts "' 11~ TlMlrllllrt .,.. ••Jell¥. GMtr1llw l1lr .....,.. IM ~ "tdl' low clolldil -CMfttl Wlttfl. A lltti. w.......,. ""· EKTJl(Mll SOUTHfJIH NlVAO.\ - .... --,....., .... 1111 r111 ... ~ lt\nl. 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J,O 11.111 ......... ,, ... 1:011.rn.e.o s... ,.,., ............. 7:• '·"'· l.f 11111 'fl"' ftM I .fl\ hh 7:2$ ''"'' MOM ltJ .. l:ll t .l'l'I. a.11 ,;. '""· Tl'llJncllr1torl!'l1. wllicll llOl144 11p Iii """""""1111• ... , .In ""' ~*'" ,..,.., MC!lofl Wtdllttdft, C:trtlll\ute ,..,.,...,: WI lf'lt llW'il tl'llll lftlt fht Mrf'r lttlltt. Mr111 """"""'1!11'1 _. 11ndfl' '°""""'° ,,... . .._."'!tt,...., 11..,,.. lllt'tt 11111 M""-9cl •l•k ol Tt1:r1 rlld llldl1111, $11'1111..-llrM .-lltd rrer• 91' OkllllDMr. MIH-t11rl. 1(111111, Art.I,.. Ml. IMll!M Ind Mlcltltlfl. "fMrl' J lnc1111 .. •r l11 Nllttlll rr110 Oli11'*711 Cltr •rid IM llNPOll .. ·-· Pitt*""" ~l•ncl lltltld Clfr 'ltdllvl'f ·-S.Ctl'tlf'llt S.ll Llltt Cltr $811 Ditto 1111 ll"trllCIKO S1rffi. s.-..... '""""' W1tl'll11t!M I " .. ,. ., • .. .17 ,, 5J " " A 0 " n '' JJ .11 .... " . " 4l :n JI Jr . .. II • lhe Nixon Adm\n151ratlon bo1 at.allblly Ol'lanlled lhe aupply cl munitlo111 and olher military mal<riel lo !ht LM No~ Sl!ilt Malak clique lo m..,.... Ibo Cam- bodian people and Vlelnamelt ond Ollnese residents in Cimbodla and alao n'" to mention tbe almost dally .vloiatlon of lhe. l<nitory of Caml>odla b7· U.S. and Salaon troops. ly Ille target ol. Ille coup lhal led lo lhe overihn>w cl Prince· Norodom Sihanouk u Cambodian chief of a t a t e Man:h 11. . Hanoi and lhe Viel CoOI warned in aharl'IY worded atatemeoll tllal the United Stales henctr.rth will be COO· fronted by a United frool of le!Ust Vietnamese, Llotian and , C8mbodian 'lbe Cambodian rtatiinc1 and ·1.n- temational repe~ions ovenbadowed Ille war In Vietnam !Isett and _,ity pushed Ille IS.monl!H>ld Paris · peace talks to a new low.· "We severely coo.demo aod denOunce .. the new and e.xtremely grave llep of lhe Unlled Slates In Cambodia,• Ha«" delegate, Nguyen Mtm Vy. Aid. .. Thia is a new, extremely aerious escalatloo of the Nixon AdminlsllaUon in Cambodia." forces. , Tbe altac:k on Pmldent Nl%Oll's declslon lo provide aupport lo Saigon's imlls lhel.crolled lhe Cembodlan lrootier came at today'• 65th wffkly -1of1 of the Vietnamese peace conference,,. "The United Stales has Clrrled Ille war in Jndodlina one step fcrwanl b)' giving orders, and openly ~ lhe South Vielnam<S< inilltary ~ on Cambodian soil," the Hanoi diplomat said. Vy'1 statement WU the first time the Vietnamese O:mmlmlst.s bad men- tioned au-,.,;-. .. being alleied- ' ' ' ' ... c. S.ears Sears Aluminum Frame Sturdy Screen Door I Low Prictd! 88 • •·Fiberglass ieftenin1 ••• kick plate Cor.odMI protect.ion • Low, low price )'ti £oily ,_Ollllll " • Fiberglas• ecreenin1 for .,.,1¥1'4• •entilation •Complete with 11pring el_., b-a. •nd b~k and eye latch • Size! 3!?x~inchea and 3m8CH.nclm Better Mlll·flnilh Screen llooft.t. 1izt8 32x80·ln, and 36"80-ln..9.99· .. b. Replar 116.9.9 Screen Dool' SAVE $2! 1488 1 • Grey Fiberglas• tcftelli with 1 ~ bar.air closer e Tulip littb with-loe'king ae1io9 • JO.incli kielr.plltte • SizCs 3h.SO.incbes and ~ 123. 99 Anodized Extraded Aluminum SUeen Doon 32x8o.Jneh .. ,36x8o.Jneb.&_%o.&I •· $32.99 White Extruded Aluminum Screen Door SA\E S., •• 2788 • Charcoal Fiberglaa• aereenina: with 2Whitepushban •Black pwh button latch with loekinc butlon. JO .. kick.p)ale • Siaea 32x80-inch and 36x80-ioch •While, hoked-I fiaioh Sears 3-in -1 Deluxe Asphalt Shingles • Tbt111 ahingles are nted at 235-U.. per 100 eq. fL ••• end that me1ns they•n tough , •They are cowered with l~ pme .... pball that nukes them thicker and 11 tronger. Guaranteed for 18 yeai-t. Phone Sean for free estimale 1 S. Year laltalled Deluxe .A.phalt Shio1le Roof Guanintee Wbeo lmtall•tiort ii .mi:ced Woush Seu1, i( raof letk should de~lop btt&uie of 1.117 defttt in •hio. ales or workmaiullip 111'ithin 7 ,.e.n cl 1PPlication. we •ill repair or rep!"' • our option, (lff, Par regu.1-cu.nut ptice for 1adl reptiror ~a1 during not 11 -,rtn. subtractiag l/216th Of price for ~llCh month rcmainlq on JUln.lltft'. s~ VE 20%1 70 Sq. FL Roll Fiberg!M Jn.rulalion HegularS5.29aRo11 4~ ... n • HelpsloweryourbuLing.cooHngbilh • 3-inch thick asphalted paper 1cta u a Yapor barrier in rourwalla •Solid In eompreeeed, euy lo handle roU. t•.99 .. Foll-Faced" lnsulRtion-4.66 •NU 15% OFF Sears .. ,_"'......_n1-4n1 •-•a.nu --•••1" ,.... ___ , _Cll .. 1_._, --··-·-" ...... .. ~ ......... ____ , --- JUU,-1111(11:.-NIW. COW-.-11 ---•l•ffll ... _, .. l .. tll,ttl•ll ._All--••tl ._. .. ._,,_ .._.H'!"."~...,.......,....,..,,.&& .. •iior.&,,._..1.iMwttlP&"•.thMl11wowww••"1•T_...., ..... '-" ...... I • lied the iled .... rt b and Dlik. I lo ina, lllly -the •P-l N. ·1n. -!!Illy .... the I by i the 0 OD - I .. II • • • ~· • a " I .. -• , Fountain Va~ley ·. . ' -. Tod,.y's F~~ K-v;-·s1oeu • VO~. 63, NO. 1.03, 3 SECTIONS, ·44 PAGES . ' •Ii\ ' ' . ORANGE :C0UNP(, CALIFORNIA· . \ . : , • I ,> I ! .THURSDAY,. APRIL · 30,. 1970 '1 • • .'[E~:CENTS .. Huntington Wants No Part of Freeway Change By ALAN DIRKIN Of tflOI Dall't' l"lltl Sl•ff A street sign marked "No Way" in clear lettering would typify reaction in Hunttngton Beach today to Assemblyman Robert Badham's propo'sal to re.route Pilcific Coast Freeway. ·"It would be nice i! we didn 't have to ' have the freeway down by the coast ~ut )l's. tqere because it's necessary," City Engineer \Villiam Hartge com· me~ted. I lie was discussing a plan put forward by BadhQm (R-Newport Beach) to route I.he Coast Freew,ay around Newport and its Corona del Mar Community. To do so would mean changing freeway pat- terns in central Huntington Beach. City traffic engineer Paul Cook · and Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun- tington Beach) also greeted Badham's proposal with skepticism. ":t would cause tremendous surface street problems in Huntington Beach," Burke said. C09k responded with. "It would choke up the other freewa1s." ... Under Badham's plan the Pac1£1clCoast Freeway would be delet~d east of the proposed Route 39 in Huntington Beach. Route 39 is planned le\ be an, eigbt·lant! rreeway running notth·soulh .-hall a mile to the east of Beach Boulevard, roughly along N~wland Street. Badham's proposal wou1d mean that ) l SPACE RESEARCH -College students selected for rese~rch program inside space station simulator at McDo.nnell Douglas in Huntington Beach test the device's communications console. From left arc Wilson Wong , Terry Donlon, La\vrence llootman and James Shoemaker. Beach Group Seeks 1Vlexico .. Orphans Help Several Huntington Beach familie s are seeking money, blankets. sheets. pillows and 100 pajamas to help the "Magic Padre" of Baja California. They're calling the pajama drive "Operation Orphans" because i t' s directed toward the 100 youngsters cared ror by the Rev. Henry Vetter of Tecate, Baj.i California. Clothing and bed~ing for the kids, age:; 4-17, can be taken to the Community Methodist Church, 6662 Heil Ave ., Hun- tington Beach. The drive to help the Rev. Velter's nrphan s -he 's called the "Magic Padre" bee.ii.use he perfonns sleight-of-hand tricks for the youngsters -started Sun· day when three local w(lmen and one husband drove to Tecate. "We saw the young boys in Teca\e sleeping on the floor. in the same clothes night-after-night." reported l\.trs. Ha!1fla Alekoumbides. a founder of Help Line, the .phone network that helps drug users. "And the girls," she continued, "are staying in shacks in Tijuana because there are no girls fadllc.io in Tec<rte." Father Vetter fota1'1ed Ran c ho Na1.11reth for orphans, in July, 1968. But on J~n. 6. this year, a blaze ripped 0 lhrough the not yet completed dormitory, de$oying. for the nloment, Father Vel· ter's dream. . "Why thev don·t eve n have running "'ater 'to · Wash with," Mrs. Carol Jankowski. exclaimed . The Catholic missionary's fame has sptead t h r o U g h o u t Mexico an~ into the San Diego area where many residents are CQ\lecting money. clothing and bed- ding to belp the orphanage. ''The U.S. Coast Guard in Long Beach recently repaired a bus for Father Vet· ter. then donated 20 cots for som~ of the.boys to sleep on,'' Mrs. Alekoumb1des said. "He's such a humble man. He slee p! Bogus Blastoff . •;if~!/ ,, . . ' . Four in Douglas Space Sjmulator • Faur sludents are locked up in a space station in Huntington Beach. But it's only a station sim ulator and they'll be let out in four day!. The students entered tbe simulator Wednesday at McDonnell Do u g I a s Astronautics Company's space center in northe-rn Huntington Beach for a five-day stay. The experiment Is in preparation for a 90-day test later lo deffne 1he technology and procedures required for long duration ml!sions in orbiting space stations. McDonnell Douglas scientists explained that a major goal of t.be program is to evaluate lhe capability of a regenerative life support system to pro- vide a habitable atmosphere and potable water without resupply by continuously reclaiming . carbon dioxide, perspiration and urine waste for reuse. Another objective of the research is to determine the effects of a long pe·riod (If uninterrupted confinement on a crew. The crewmen, all college students on temporary !eave from their studies, were selected on the basis of comprehensive physical and p s ychological ex· aminatlons. The quartet for the five-day trial run includes 'Vilson Wong, 2 4 ·ye a r ·old aeronautlt'3 · major · tro'rn Cal Tech : Lawrence Hoobnan, 23, graduate student in social ·psychology 1 from USC: James Shoemaker, 21, aerospace engineering· sill.dent at USC, and Terry Oool<>A . 30- year-0ld graduate student in medical physics from UCLA. During the 90-day and the five-day runs. crew members wiJri.monitor the performance of the-.. equipmenl ,in Jl!e space station simulator,,maintain :lt artd attempt repairs -just as astl'(ll'lauts would do if they were in,orl)lt. Other , crew duties will iQ~lude · Lhe taking (If bacterial cul\ure samP.)es for microbiological arialysi~. Daily routine of the crew will tie. diVided irl:to eight hours tor sleep, eight to 12 hours for work and four to eight hours of leisure time. Activities of the crew and <Xlnditions in the simulator will be JTl(lriitored around-the-clock by McDonnelJ ·Douglas "ground crews" utilizing television and voice communication systems, compUters and special instrumentation. The McDonnell Douglas s_Pace station simulator is a double-walled chamber, IZ feet in diameter and 40 feet Jong. It is equipped with a ISO-Cubic-foot airk>ck for entrance to and. exit from the pressurized interior. Apartments Given Okay If Parking Underground Underground parking proposed for two separate apartment <Xlmplexc! i n downtown HunLington Beach conv inced planning commissioners to allow extra apartmeots on both sites. Wben Llndborg was quizzed by Duke he said , "I don't want thi.1 qn a .hardship basis, but because it is good planning. Look as my proposal and ask yourseJves why no (lther developer has come into the area." Instead of the Coa!t Freeway traffic run· ning south fr1>m Adams Avenue down to the coast and through Niwport U be sent up the Route 39 Freeway and hooked up to the San Diego Freeway and then the Corona del Mar Freeway, 'thus bypass- ing the llarbor Area. While Badham says the idea to skirt Corona del Ma~ js his, Sµite Sen. Joh!l Schmit2 (R-Tustin) C<lncurs and says the legislators will present similar bills in both houses of the Legislature. From Sacramento, . Burke said that he understood Badharn's main concern is for the frletway to bypass the Harbor Area and that how that could be ®ne was secondary. ''My first .feeling Is that attempts have been1 made over and over by legisl~tOrs to change d«lslons (If the state Highway Commission by elirhinatlng or clian8:lng freeway route!, but unUI .now the Legislature he s.topped all effoi'ta of thi! kind because ol. the prectdent it would set. From then on every freeway route decision would r made in the Legislature." Tbe Assemblyman wer)t .on, "If he's successful, ii would be a.re~) big surp.rise to me. It would be a precedent-setting move that would be mighty difficult to accompllsh . Asked whether he feJt ther& was a need for the· PaCific CoaSt Freeway in HtmtiOgtO;fl lJeach. and Ne~rt. ~each, (Ste FREEWAY, Pep I) ' Viets Push Attack U.S.-bcicked Force Deep in Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) "2 Four tank·led South Vietnamese task lorces est!.mated at 9,000 men drove deep into Cambodia today with U.S. air support , and their commander announced they would re- main "for many days" to trap and destroy thousands of Communist troops in their onetime sanctuary, The main thrust along flighway 1 leading · from Saigon to Phnom Perth overran the Cambodian towns of Chipou and. Prasault, ZS miles inside C11mbodla, and was pushing westward towards c;:am· bodµin , troops b!lsed at Svay ~eng, 40 miles inside Cambodict and 70 air miles from Phnom Penh. 'T~ree ·~8.sk for~es .estimated ·at. 2,500 each drove into Cambodl.a in·the ~arral's Beak sector whic;h juts into South Viet- nam to within 35 miles of Saigon. A fourth ta&k forc.e .of 1,500 .Jt~~ across Ill• ~ ft<!!ii ~)lek<fJ!Dilla town ot Kfeiig TUonJI' to iry to cu\ ot( 11,000 Vtet Cong in the area. ' So far the South Vielnamese report ~lling , 445 Viet ~f arid North Viet- namese troops and capturing vist ,.Up- plies of equipmCJlt af a lois·of 32 killed and 112 Wounded, Mi Of ,the .wounded straled by miStake by UtS; helicopter gunships. ·Two U.S. advisers were reported wounded. · - Although a Cambodian spokesman in Phnom Penh Said bis . government could not approve the allied operaUon, sillce . ' ' State Opp0s~s Newpo1t Man's River P-ier Plan The stale lsn'I hooke<I on a Newport Beach real estate br(lker's pl8t1 1to build "·fishing pier off the Santa A'1a Ri vCr mouth. Instead of allowing Dt>nni11 Lynch arnf his backers to convert the 1,700-foot trestle built to help !aY a sewer outfall into a permanent f~cility. the state Parks and Recreation Department wants the s!ructure removed. The trestle slretches out on the west :<ide of the river across Huntin'1on State Park and to con!truct a permal'lent recreational pier Lynch would need •an ""scment from the :;late Parks 'and Recreation Department Joe Benson of the Army Corps nt Engineers today revealed the state parks dc,.,artment's objection. Jn a letter sent to both Lynch and the Corps (If Engirieers, state parks authorities said the priVate pier would be against their'''long-ranj!:e development plans for maxirTiwn public use (If the beach." TI1e lelter cites parking problem:'! already in existence at tM beach and states that to locate a control entrance (See PIER, Page I) It violated Cambodian neutrality, front dispatches said the operation was coordinated witlt the Cambodian anny to the extent a dozen Cambodians liilked up with the advancing Vietnamese forces as guides. The first officially acknowledged drive. Into Cambodia by South Vietnamese troops had the official purpose of destroy· Ing Viet Cong and North Vietnamese base C31TlPS ' near "ttre horde~. But as the · Communists ·ned 'from the allie! -some in commandeered cara -the scope of the .action was e,itended. , Lt Gen. Do Cao Tri said he was extending the operatlon because: ••we will need many days to ·search the area thoroughly. We wilt try to control U1e area, to trap them insi<ie and desti'oY them." He aaid thret brigades of South Viet· namese troops were involved in the puah along Highway I. Newly structured South Vietnamese brigades tolal about IO per• cent of an American army brJl:ade of 4:500 men, but military sources in Saigon said Tri's (orces totaled about 7,500 men. 'Fin4i*'fls ll njustifled' . . · !\.~µn.~dx~~iti~iZes Jti.dge . . Onl\.opechneCaseRuling BOSTON . (UPI) -Judge Jam1s A. Boy.le,' refuting sworil testimony ' by Edward M. Kennedy,+ says the Ma'ssachuiietts senator was taking Maf.y Jo Kopechn~ down ,a road, lbat Jed only to a secluded beach the night sl;le-drown. ed. Ke'lfledy says· he had bee" taking' Miss Kopechne baCk to ' drop htr of! at h~ . ' I motel. He. rejected "the jnfqen1.:es ,and ultimate .flllding of .the •Jlldge ls, ~port" as nOt •"jusllfied."" BOyleJ in' his findings on the celebrated case, -~Id Kenn~r. pr'itbably was-drfving negJigeritly. Jle ert Ope'n ~ the m·atter of whether criminal chlirges might bC pressf.d -' although further action ap. peared unlikely. Miss Kopechne , 28, a former secretary for Sen. Ro!)ert F. Kennedy, drowned \vhen Kennedy's auto went off a bridge at Chappaquiddick Island. Ma5s.. the night of July 18, 1969. The testl91ony and' B'Oyfe•s flridlngs at the inquest in Edgartown from Jan. S-ll were made public \Vednesday. Kt:ni:iedy,. in his testirq6ny, said he v.•as taking Mi,<;s Kopecl;lne , back to .her motel rOOm in Etlgartown w.hen be made I! wr?ng lijrn B;nd went. 7/IOths of a mile dQwn' .th.e ,wrong ro,d . -:--·the road that led acri;iss, a wooden Hridge spanning a tidal pond'. The auto, With Kenfiedy STOCK ltlARKET NE;W YORK (AP) -The stock market eontinaett its ·downward drlft ·this after~ noon after an early momlng' rally failed to gain support. Trading was slow. (See quotations, Pages 32-33). - Declines dutnumbered advances by 1t small margin. Earlier, advances had been ahead by almoSt four to one. · at the wheel, went off the bridge and landed'upside down in1.he pond,·dtowllln& the 'girl. Boyle noted several polnll that came (IUl in the testimony to back his _feellng Kennedy and MiSs 'Kopech'ne did' ool intend to go to E'Agartown, lncludhig: -MJs.s Kopechne left ber purse at the cottage where ' she 1and · Kennedy had be~n attending a party .f6r 'JS"ennedy friends and "bop~ ri>ol\l" atrls. who had w9tked in the Robert Kenbedy cam· palgn, including Mils Kopecllne: -Miss Koj>ecbne did Dot ·ask her room· _., mate at the motel for tha key to. their room bel9re leaving the PJ\rty. · -The ferry that crossed froru Chap· paquiddick laland to Edgartown atopped at midnight, and no special arrangements for a later cro.ssing had been made. Boyle said "l infer a reasOnable and probl'iblt explanation of the totality or the above facts is that Kennedy and Kopechne did not intend to return to ~gart,own at that ,time; that Kenned1 did not •intend to drtve to the ferry ~Up and his turn onto Dike Road was 1ntenUonal. ·Having 11ached this con· clusion~ lhe question the• arises as to whether there was anything criminal in his operation of ,tJie motor veblcle .•• "I therefore find there Is probable cause to:believe that Edward M. Kennedy operated his motor vehicle negllgtntly on a way (IT In· a place to whlch the public have a right of access and that such operation appears to have con- tributed to the ~eath of Mary Jo Kopechne." Kennedy. Jn a staJ.ement issued through his Washington office, said "At the in- quest, I truthfully answered all questions ask~ or me. Jn my personal view, the inferences and ultimate finding ol (See KOPECHNE, Pase I) In his trousers and anything given to him goes tO the boys first,·• Mrs. Jankowski added. . . Mrs. Alekownbides, an cnergellc civ ic crusader in this area, stumbled on t~e pli~t or Rancho Nazareth by coin· cidence. Bullder Leonard Lindborg was granted pcnnission lo build the two 22-unit apartments as long as he provides suf. ficient parking for guests. Sa1ita Aiia Hearing Orange Coast ·•r know a man In Spring Valley, Joseph de Crescente, who t~ld me about the Rev. Vetter,'' she explained. Jt turned out that Crescente happened to be passing by Rancho Nazaret~ the day i~. bU:tSt into flames and if .he had not alerted Father Vetter. the ~1ve nuDI and the boys there, they might not have escaped. "Be.sides the clothing, they need a lot or building materials and manpo\~er to reconsl.ruct those donns and build new ones so the girls can <Xlme do\1'n from Tijuana." r-.trs. Alckoumbldes ~aid. A $2 donation. with checks written to "Operation Orphans," :ind sent to P.O. Box 1666, Hunlington Beach, 'vou ld also he.Ip. . Mrl. Alekoumbldes sajd '2 buys t~g.ti!_ building blocks fOr the Tecate mission. "They riecd an awful lot of things and \\'t 'vt just got to get the m $0me help from here." ' ' • '. Lindborg'! two pieces of downtown property are at the corner of Pecan Avenue and 16tl't Street, and on the y.·est side of ISth Street, south of Pecan. Current zoning laws al1ow only 12 apartment units on each parcel. "I think he has squarely hit the nail on the head at what we're trying to do downtown,'' Roger Slatiis, chainnan of the commission, exclaimed at the Tuesday night meeting, Other <Xlmmissioners agreed . pro- claiming underground parking as one or lhe best solutions proposed for the downtown area 's tiaht parking situation. The city Is considering massive rev isions In 1.0ning ordinances governing the downtown area. including higher density ror ap:irtmenll which can provide their own parking. The changes, however, have not been adopted. Ooly Comrni S.Joner Henry Puke op- posed the conditional exccpUon. main- taining that 1uch exceptions should only be granted for hardship circumstances •s stated ln the ordin8Jlce. Fish Cancer_ Probe Opens Experts began testimony this morn.Ing In Santa Ana at an emergency meeUng of the House SubCOrninittee' on Fisheries and Oceanography on the evi.:lence of cancer and · other abnormalities in fish caught of( the Orange Coast near lhe mouth of the Santa Ana Rivet·. Jn opening the session, Rep. Richard 1', Hanna ~!>-Westminster) said, "we 11.s a na tion cannol afford to remain\., ignorant or the relationship between ·ater pollution, fish dl~se and tfte ef(ec t on humans of eating diseased or infected fish. ''there~ ar.e._UtQse '!ho ~I.., that _sin«_ no clear and convincing link between fi sh illness and human lllntSs has been proven It Is folly to pursue tbe fwe. I di~grl'lc. Human health is ar st.ake. ,,. • "I am appalled al the acknpwltdged dearth or 1J1formation available. and research being done on the erfecl fis:1 disease may have on human health. Answers must be found as soon as possible to remove this potential threat.'' J.1anna's alarm was backed vigorously by the fir st witness, Dr. Bruce HalMcad of the \Vorld Life Research Institute in Co1t911. Ue told of a "dramatlcJ classical ex. ample" of more than 100 people sub- }ected lo rlsh pol&0nina 10 t9S8 at Mln11mata, Japan. "Over _one;ll!r~_ ol Ulese_ people die~ and ol lhe balanct ha!( suffered disabling sicirnesaes. "l was calltd an alarmi.st at the Umt: wh<nJJllggcstld tht posslblllty ol tht same thing happcnjns in. the U.S. . • "AdmJttcdly" no one can say that diseases from eaUn1 fiSh ar.e the direct cause of human cancer but researchers believe .Jt .Js ~bl~. , It i& . a valid qutstion whlch demands' an answer." The hearin1 was to conllnue. thrQughout lhc' day lo the SupCrvlsors mtellng room in Santa Ana wlth more than a dozen witnesses scheduled to be heard. ' · In the santa Ana hear~gs, one expert Is sc~eduled to tesllry ~n behalf of the Oran1e County Sanlt&llion Districts 19_ ln.~te ,his belief thtre ~ no soHd l)nk bf:tween 5ewage outfalls and can- Ct.rous fish,• H• le Charles T. Mitchell, pmident (li< .. Fl5U, Pap ll ( Wea iher Sunshlne is the order of the day for Friday, with temperatures il'I IJ1e shimmering 70's along the coast and up tp a sizz!Jng 80 de- grees further inland. INSIDE TODAY The "cable car namtd dtrirt .. rolltd t(p to a $~01000 payoff f<W tht girl w110 lost ·more than hn htart fn Sa11 Francisco. Sec Page 4. <••lt.r1111i •• (llK•lllt U' , CIJitlfl" )4"41 Ctll'lln 11 Crmllftff '1 0.-111 Nell(.. 11 .. ,.., ... ,._ ' ·~~lflll!'"I tt•IJ ~"'·-U># *'9K-If '"" Uliftl'I 11 I • 1 ' . 1 ' I ---. . -· ... - ' { • DAll.Y PILOl H )hon<!Ot1 A.~I :IO~lt/O --Newport!>~ •Mage·I len9 D o.1ne .,~ 1 I ~ I I L, 1 ; I I l I I I I I l I 1 I ; I • • A. Nnporl ljeach fpnlq are<led a ....... "-" ..... "1adl1;-flft , ....... port ............ .... by Ille ...,... lnlrl'f slllldrrhls -after lie RI out to COn<JU!;I'_~ -ol e.,U.. • Robl!I L. .Graham, 21, maneuvered bis IS.loot ~ llolum ol lhe Dove to a bkth at Long Beach Marina, after provllrc ho could do wbal lboy mt couldn'I be done by a boy. lie Wll 11 wllen he bepn his ody'!f!'f· Ttie youngest man ever to sail llcide around ,Ibo -Id was .,,..led wllb a royol wtlcami .. Ibo. i>tlleied ..Uboal frOlll Page l .. FREEWAY •.• . . Bullre nplled, "Once· I qllffUoned lhe rill 8'"d for 1~ bul I don'I have much doubl ·oboul II now. YllU con eo down any claT and ..... lhe ,nOecl. Aitd lbat'a not jllll iociUr~c lllm, 11'• lbroulh ~--" .. -.. ~la~~-!he freeway plans too fir alons to make a change. ''My l'tlc:tion ls that U he is successful in elirplnatlng the freeway at Beach ~evaa1.Bl\d. Adams Averibe ori,IOUth, I 111·m ~ for· the OOut Freeway trotit a..1 Point n.rti.. · "II wW!d cau8e itemenclous rrurface street th&Jeihs," Borke continued. "You would have Route 39 and the Coast Freewiy both dumping beachgoers at that poinl..Jt would make no sense." Cl)l !Jilioeer Hartse poinled out lhat rrt.aJe lSIYlilOo of lflgbways studies ftuld · ~ lo Ila ~on blllde the Cap" liln'• Im>;..., Mllol!Ch.. · HJ. ~. lllr. 1!'!11 M!i. i.Jlt GtfllllD, ol 41J ... Widrft'• Road, N~,......_G 'lllf • -wUt l'ltll, .. 111· lht wMl'1 sa1 Or arrived. • - He and bil wife f~¢i ~el o)d arqlind the world -m d.ltftrent ...,, -to find advenwre. only lo fJrul eacb olber in SoQth Africa. They were marrieid in Australia. Graham, .w~ flrst conceived of his monumenW voyage , while tbe .family Uved In Hawall, -per11ape 1oO tired ' 5.3 9 Set Sail Fleet Off to Ensenada Under ·~right, aunny 1kles and liglrl ••uthwe•lerly winds, a fleet of c&lamarall• 1ed 539 •ailing yachts off Newport Harbor al flle ,strp!<e of noon today ln,tbe starl of the 23rd annual Newport· Ensenada yacht race .. The anticipated field of 565 was cut to 539 at Ill~. slarling gun as 31 craft dropped out. Boats atarted •.treamittl out of the jetly at 10:30 a.m. heading for the ~ual ·•tarting lines off the Balboa Pier. The cats went ?ff at noon sharp with thrM other divisions following al 10 minute mter- Vlll•. The fi rst boats will start arriving in Ensenada, 125 nautical l'hiles away early on Friday. The complete list entries (including the dropout.) will be found on Page 8 o!·today's DAILY PILOT. detmnlhe whelber Badham'a rerooUrig '--------------...... ~------;___J would Work. "I think it's nece!S8ry to have a freeway in some placeii along' the~." Tra'l!ic qn<er Cook said: · "It tbouncfa to me like it would mean putlloa all Ibo traffic on lloute 39 and tl)e San Diego freeways whlcb already b»e bea'l' J>R>Jected trafllc volumes Of thtir , Owti. ·"You eon ~a link out ol tlle system and all )'OU '~plllh ls to Oftrload tile !)'Item. II 'liould choke up lbe olher freew111." - Cook allci pointed out tbil the slale bu ~ rlghJI· of way alollg lbe -.1. fllld.IOwtr Buch Boulevard for tlie freeway. 1be traffic engineer agreed with Burke that the idea would overburden turfaoe rrtmls. •CJ don't know what it· would do to Adami AVenUe, Ham1ltqn Avenue and O>olt Rfibwtl)o .traffic! lrrlo Collla Meail and Newport Beach. '!1>e bridges lbere are overloaded now at weekends.'' ,,.,,,.. ... ·P-te J PIER •.. '" Ibo pier ~ be "im!ll'lctlcal." ''The i:nposa1 would deprive the public of. much needed beach area," Lynch was Joki. -· . The letter refers to an agreement by Ibo Orqe C<lunty Sanitation Dlstricl and the state to allow comtrucUon of the treidle for the laying of the sewer CfUlfaD bul also stlpulallng lbal lbe stale ~ be restored and the tre.slle laken down wben lbe work ls completed. '!be letter concludes by saying It wishes lblB agreement .. be honored. Beason Yid that 1he state parts• ob- jec:tlon wu the only one the corps rectlv· ed. "Most oC the ciUes that cont.acted us· limply requested more lnfonnaUon." Demon aaid the neJ:t move ls up to Lynch. "He mmt prtviil upon the alile p&rU peopla and try lo gel them to chanfe their mindJ." Lyncb could not be reached loday lo !ell ol lbls alralegy. Drug Labeling Backed WASlllNGTON'(UPIJ' -Th< American Medical .AlloclaUOn (AMA) Wedneoday endolMd a lftPosal requiring every wdcrtollou d'1I( be labeled wllh ;r. idmt1flc. or geaeric, name after being lold Ibo p<OVlsion might have lmened tbe -tragedy. DAILY PILOT ORAifol: COA$T PUILllMIHG COMP.IHY ........... w ••• ""'*"' ... Pllbt..,.. i,1,,._ a. cwt.., VQ .... llltnl ..... 0.-.•I MIMD'f 1\1M1t Ktt•il lllllW TJ.111111 A. M•,,Jii ... M"""tlnl Ednor Alb ... t W. lit" ~It Edit« Ml•••"''"'~'"'• a..• Office 11115 ....... leul1v1r4 M1lli11t AcUttt.i P.O. h x 790, t26•t --l•---'-di: .. l"trwst ........... CNf1 M ... : llO WtJI 111 ~1rftl ""'"'1 .. ~: 2211 \lkll lllMI '°"'-Vl•d 1M ~: • Norfll Iii Ctnllnt llNI • 1-.. :_:-- Me sa Hospital Worker Stabbed; JaniU>r Held A housekeeper at a Coata Mesa con- valelcent hotpital was stabbed in the back fj.ve Umes following a quarrel with a fellow employe Wednetday. A 64-year- old janitor dragged the attacker off. Mrs. V,irginia Kerby. 48, head bouie~per al the facWty al l056 'nlurin Ave .• was listed in seriowi condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. 5he llU!fllred a coU.p,.d lllll& la the early altemoon hour attack. Albert Scuterl, 53, or 185 Costa Mesa St.,'Colla Mesa,'-was arrested and booked fol' lnmllgation flf '8!aaull with intent t.o Cm"lmlt murdef afttr the altercation. Detective LleUteaant Hal Fischer said ~teri was cooperative and remorseful after the Incident, apparently stemming from u argument over Mn. Kerby tiding with bis ex-wife in a court ca". InvestI&ators piecing together what oc- curred iD the storeroom at the Ba:yv:lew Convatesetnt Hospital said Mrs. Kerby argued wtlh Sculert and turnod lo leave. The events were witnessed by janitor Elmer Lee, ~. who said be heard the conversation between victim and suspect. "Wbea she turned, Scuteri pulled a knUe out of his pocket and stabbed her in the back," i..t !old police. · Mrs. Kerby, of 501 Oraogethorpe Ave., Anaheim, collapsed jnto 1 chair and Lee said Scuteri fell upon her again. Lee said he grabbed Scuteri from behind and dragged him. away from the bleeding head house.keeper, allowing her to get out of the crowded quarters, Frnna Pagel KOPECHNE. •• the judge's report are not JusUIJed and I reject them. "'11le facts of th!s Incident are now fully public/' he added, "aJld eventual judgmeilt and understanding rests where It belongs. For myself I plan no further statement on thia tragic matter. &th our families have suffered enough from public utterances and speculations." In hJs findings, Boyle did Mt bring · up the question of why Kennedy waited some nine hours before reporting the accldeilt to Edg111i9wn police. I.esl!O R. Lelarid, ~ foreman of the Dukei County Grand Jury, which on April 7 ended a whirlwlnd probe o{ the accident wlµ,out re turning an in- dictment. aa.id there was ·• '1pou]bility '' of recoovening the jury al11tou1h he hadn't "considered it yet." Leland will have to make up his mind by May 11 when a new grand jury is selected, all.hough theoretically flOthtng would stand b1 the way of the new Jury taklng up the case. .. He stabbed me," abe mumbled, Stag- gering lowanl help. A group of elderly ladies sang ••How Great Thou Ari," in the hospital IOW1ge .u ntnes adlhlnlstertd nrsr aid io-the badly wounded woman. "Scuterl was sitting in the storeroom saylng : 'I'm sorry. I'm sOrry,' " the janllor expllined. l'r'om Page 1 FISH ... of Marine Biok>&ical Consultants, Inc., ol 407 .E. Bay SI., C06la Mesa. In prepared teeUmony to the com- m.rttee, Mitchell declared, "The ac- e u r r e n ce of fishea With anomalous growths or disease in areas of waste discharge (both industrial and domestic) is by no means a recent event. Such IL.bes have been collected aa early as 1922 in San Francisco Bay. The California Department or fish and game has documented the problem since 1956 in the Los Angeles area. "Similar reports can also 1be found for British Columbia, Washington, Long Beach ~nd San Diego. The exact, etiology of these abnormal growths and leiiOns oo fishes in these areas remains a mystery despite the work of many in- vestigiltors. Jlistologlcal studies have in- dicated these papiUoma are not ~mallg~ nant but probably caused by mechanical, chemical or infectious irritation. "The occurrence of these fishes is not limited to areas near domestic discharges; fishes exposed to 3 to 10 J>e"Celit dilutions of water from Domin- gues Channel Jn 1.-0s Angeles Harbor de~aped lesions within 12 days and many died even after removal to clear water. "In lhe coone ol our presenl·blologlcal survey we have made 24 separate ·benthie trawls (in Au~ and November, 1969 and February 1970) within I miles of th~ present Orange Cot.inty Ocean Outfall. Altn<m 8,000 fi shes have bffln captured represenUng 42 species. "About one-half ol these fishes have been captured within 100 yards of the outfall. Approximately 5 percenl of these fish exhibited either papilloma or lesioos on the ·fins .. All were white ·croakers, • fish not generally u.sed for con~ surnptlon. or this total 1ppro1.lmately 26 individuals had papilloma. Two dover aole have been captu!'W with papilloma, boGl collected some dittance from the outfall. · "The present survey, under way since August 1969, will not Only supply background data for the outfall u n d e r CGnstruction but will also ·monitor changes ln lbe area of the . existing outfall after its operation has ceased.'' W esttninster Schools Plan • New Motivation Program Beiinnln1 neltl acbool year, •bout 140 nlnth graders at Wt,trninster High School will parUcipai. in a curriculum ex- periment deslined lo improve mollvalion arid Ieamlng. 'uJl's called i pontoM curriculum." •IJ>lalned Dr. Marvin M1rah1ll, the ICl!ool't anlstant prlnoipol. •"Jbe Ideal tnltltuUon woulil allow each ttudent to progr!ss at hit cwn ratt. This la an attempt In that direction. Htnce the cerm "Pontoon," a temporary bridge," M1nhall 11id. -· The experiment will lnvolv.e the strue- tw1ng ti four clas~s in one block or lime lo allow large group lecture, small group discussion. student tutoring and direcled otudy through lhe help of a teaching !Ide, he said. Class length and size would be tom· plete1y flexible, allowing the four teachers to organize their time more efficlenUy, acC()rdlng lo Dr. MRrshaD. lf the experiment Is succcsaful, he prl'dleted, there wtll be a reduction In dropouts, lmprovtment of atttndanct, alllludt and educational achlevtmen~ • . ··-- • ~near Probletrit .Neeil Solvi'!fl' Tbe journey r:emlnlacent. o\ .renowned' Sir"'-~~'°"' voy1p1 -nur· dllailir ·o11 th( lralc!lmlus Cape of G9Qd Hope t.o. He also doJle into the stormswept Jn • dian . Ocean at ~ a.m. one Ume, to tetrje~e a broken mast arid oh al)(Jlher' oceaston· the small craft was nearly-· nm down by a loll(ering f~lhter. Besides the fad he will become a fa)her in July, almosl on Ille fifth an;. niver~ary~ of hls start, Graham's future-.. ._ is uocert&ln., .' I1o ls a h11ll' acbool dropout bot 118 " an aducatiorJ denl;ct moal buma:, belnp. ·' J , , ! I , ::· • i • j Wilco~.en Blasts ·Schmitz \ I -,.• ' ,. . •' .. "' 111!111,.. ·~wii•: II ·poll~tmt ·orqe . !'11ilr ll~r·a veir·~c 1.l.J~." C<!WllY', ,.,. : •Iii! yei;bel aa=wa , ta · Wll®"° ~ •. ".bui.11rt~1:"! vlolalloliJ polluUng Oraf!J• CowlJll's .a · Ol'.lbe :water quallty l""""°' atalldilda in the race for u.~. C9iicreaa; 'dllle 1j>rcillihoul Qlis dlllilcJ: We blie Ip Wiiliam Wllcoten' dlargecl ''l'Ui!aday · In .tab !t>elt mruuiet' .O·llJlt ·~ 'wUI Mission Viejo. ··-· · .'· · ·not !urthe!j-pollyte:lbe:~• Tbe1>0litr. The 37-year-old Laguna Beach attorney Upn, is aJ.rea4Y ,oCcUnirig. This problem spol<t I/ti~ .clllze111 al Mlal!in · "'l•lo " ~tab federal •aWWice la sol,.." High Schl!OI, htttlng 1 ~artoty ,of loPia . . In ·~ ·aria. o1 tciicalfun tbe ,father ::,..~dqulil'-'ld...,...r ae111on ~· :..~ ~.lili.~.lc·one ol support H al Co'lietalonal ~le . . eduetllo\o. Ha ·aald ,he has betn Sia~ ~Johll G. SdirirJt. (ft."-"'") . ::-a· -:the· P-!,IY lax JIN , .. ,. •• .., < more .and DIOrt Wiocj\rltablt .llii' in the flrsl rW!ld · ol • !lie , night whlle ocliool !tiurr)diri. ' · · · !ouching other matten 1ri , relation lo · ·lie did be ,IJolltvts tU alifrlng wlll hlS apponenl bi in,....•••• '"" Uoiii1 ~. I "We 11oo•i. O<ed reJ! ntatlon .tlril ,..,.;·.7 .,. ·.-. n• '!·~·· . •ini:e ls Ued lo illlUblled kleoi;:i" t<ilnati-· · ·0rr.Y~"9lllllO -~-· lb GOP ,_.,d. te ..... ~ ... ,., __ ,. .. ~ ....... .-be voiced -Ulla .. e C.nlU a lfllO ........,. UM11RU ...,, . l .l· ' ·• • · a eonservaUve. • · · ,., • · · lion' th):t Qln'gress has, Jost control of ·. the ·S)>elltlinl1uncUon. .. Rple. by exe~v~ .or~r 1nstead· of' Congressional control has gotten out of. hand,~' he said. He pi:omised to b"ring · _ fi~aJ ·re·spons!blltty"back'to the Congress: · "What this district needs is a responsi~ - ble coqaerVIUve representative," uld WllOOxeo.. He aa.Jd he could fill ·this ·' role betltr than his principal opponent in the Reputillcan primary, State SeJL Schmitl. -- "He muquetadea as · a CODJervativf · - yet he betonp lo the Jolin Blrc:it Society, an • organtzati@O that has attacked Republic-.ns from President Llncoln to • Prosidenl Nixon. Thia llsue IJilould nol . &et away from UJ In thli election." , • - "We have very teal problems to :io!.ve,~ . L , .' ·A l , •· p c b ~~ ·~~e\.~~~lrla~~·-, os · amitos uts ur Congressman ·James B. Ult (ft.Tuitili) hasn't concerned bl.mJeU with them. lltacualing public proper:IY uae, Wllcot· en cited . ttla own San-Saft Creek ~am· paip . .'Ind pralaed Oringe · <ioiuity aulhoHliel for laking new 1lepa lo guarantee · public beacb 1ccesa ;UJI Ind down 1be. cout. . He . dll<iusatd • h1a ~1 !or ·the formatfon of 1 Banta Margarita NaUona.t. Park which would incl~de part ol Cleveland National "Forest and~ the northerly areas of Catnp Pendleton. "This area lends itself , to national park status. I think it should seriously be considered · since it could be uSed on a 12·month basis." He moved to an enVlronmtntal pro- blem, °"' that 'faces this district., that or proper sewage treatment. · MffiV Curb Defeated On All Air Base Zo ning The Loo· Alamllot Naval Air Stal!Oll II illlll the apple ol · em:yone•a eye, bul lbe city o1 Loe Alatilllo• hu acted to iDSW'e iqM: no other agency takes an-im~r bite .out of-Jt, - 'l\reiday nlgbl, the city c o u n c 11 fonnall:ted p.n etnergencY oi'dinailce pass-- ed .in February freezing all zoning on the naval air station. "It ~imP!Y means that_ no devf:IOpment ls I>OSllblo oo 11\e air station j( II becomes a non· (edtUI! piece of ·property. This gives ,~ time to study the area and see · w~t we'd like to do with ·it," City Maqogar Wllli'!Jll Kr~us explal~ todey. ' -i Tiie blg fear ol resldenta tben! li · lhll Orange County mlgbl replace lb"' naval air fta,U(llt with a civilian alrport. "We certainly don't Want that," KraU! · said.-~ L9s Alamitos city oUiclals. have · declared that becau:se the· air station ·· is in their city, it shou~d be their property when vacated by the Navy. Federal authorities have not said who will gef M. · -' "'We also haven't learned exactly when · the air station, or ~ of it will be· turned over to other agencies," Kraus added. When . the . federal government an. W ASIDNGTON (AP) -An 'tftorl lo nounced it would phase 011t the 1,300 suspend part' of the U.S. MIRV nuciear acre air station, asencies from Mate 'J.'he city ,study or the station is ex~ pect.ed, to be complete in. about th~. ITKlQths, .according to Kraus .. He 1B.1d some of the possibilities for its use . include, "parks and open space, in- dutlrial development and perbapt a · regional shopping center." warhead buildup -which op(JOMllls Hid level down througb county and clly could wreck the U.S.&viet.dlsarmlment sharpe~d ~tr knives-to carVe up the talks -has been defeatC;if ·by the Hotile.. figurative apple. Thi' fonMI fi1ll1n el.,_ vou.'d •XfMCt to COit much, mud! mor•I · Save on elegant triple dresser bedrooms by Lenoir House $299 ' .. ~·:.~~1:1:::~"'!...~. • ; 1111• •1111.w ,.,t,,..•f ,tt11t'. • !'"1111•111'1' '9¥t Jli')et, ~kll ..... " • fl!IJI fNJ\11) lnclueltl I •wtto.W •tttiitti ~ribtr, mlrrW, •flCI !\1Mo • : IOITlt' llffdbhnl. (!Ofl't mtll fllls •~!lllrodlf'IO Hltl t1Jt.M ·. Nrtt ·'•'• u1.t1 ' ' Sii OUR ,ULL ,401 .AD IN 'AAllLY Wll KLY -MAY 2 PROFESSIC~~J. GARRFJT f URNfllJ RE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSIA MESA, CALl.F. INTERIOR DHIGN!RS ' !' ·' .. ' _ .. -? 6'44.0275 646·0216 • . --·------·---· .. .. • .. .. ; ' ~ . _, ' . at\1, ure .. ; iw ·.; rs. ,;. ,, •• .,. o! '.. .or , of. ·ing .. !Ss; ~­nsi· ~ ~Id this ' tent ien. ... . ety,~ k•d to . not . ts· the · 1. .... , hen be ... ... , ..... mid u ... in-•• • .. ' • " ,, I, .. " • .. ' ·. • Newport ··Beaek -=~ ' . -El>ITI ON . • • • • r ... .Jll • ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA • ' THURSDAY, XPRIL 30, 197Q·-~ • TEN ~ VOL 63, NO. 103, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ·- DAILY l"ILOT l"ltole 111 "•lrkk 0'0.11114111 SAILING FANS WATCH FROM CdM BLUFF AS ENSENADA RACE STARTERS LINE UP Mesa Hospital Suspect Nabbed After Sta bbing A housekeeper at a Costa Mesa con· valescent hospital was slabbed in the back five tirries following a quarrel witti a fellow ernploye Wednesday. A 64-year· old j~tor ~ragged the altacker off. Mrs. -Virginia Kerby', 48, head housekeeper ·at-ttie facility at 20a5-Tburin }.~'e., was lis,ted in scriQ\ls conditim today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. She suffered a collapsed Jung 111 the earlY afternoon hour attack. Albert Scuteri, ~. of 185 Costa Mesa St., C03ta Mesa, was arrested aod booked for investigation of assault with intent to commit murder after the altercation. Detective Lieutenant Hal Fischer said Scuteri was coope rative and remorseful after the incident, apparently stemming from an argument over Mrs. Kerby siding with his ex-wife in a court case. Investigators piecing together what OC· curred in the storeroom at the Bayview Convalescent Hospital said Mrs. Kerby argued with Scuteri and turned to leave. The eveflts were witnessed by janitor Elmer Lee, 64, who said he heard the conversation between victim and suspect. ·tWhen she turned, Scuteri pulled a knife out of hi~ pocket and stabbed her iri the back," Lee told police. ~rs. Kerby, of 501 Orangethorpe Ave., Anaheim, collapsed into a chair and Lee said Scuteri fell upon her again. Lee said he grabbed Scuteri from heh.ind and dragged him away from the bleeding head housekeepe r. allowing her to get out of the crowded quarters. "He stabbed me," she 1numbled, stag. gering toward help. A group of elderly ladies sani:; "Hov.• Great Thou Art," in the hospita l lounge as nurses administered first aid to the badly wounded woman. "Scuteri was sitting in the storeroom saying: 'I'm sorry. I'm sorry; " the janitor e1plained. Coast Freeway Fighters Slate Newport Meeting 539 ·Set Sail . . Fleet Of f to Ensenada Under bright, sunny skies and light southweste'rly winds, a fleet of catamarans Jed 539 sailing yachts off .Newport , Harbor at the stroke o! noon today in the start of the 23rd annu.aJ Newpbrt· Ens~na~ yapht r~e. ~ i . ·' ' : .. : , ··;~)_ · t~j, ·~Ir~ , The a~llC!pal~f'f'~d o! '565 was cut lo S39 at. e·'!"lrting .. g!lhi': as 31 craft dropped 1out~ . · : •l!'.:.'f-1 .. : .... ·~· Boats star!~' •ll;•aming out of the jeUy at 10,:i.r a4n. hefding !or the dual st8rlihg·l1Des off lhe Balboa Pier. The-cats. went off at noon sharp with three other divisio·ns foUowihg at 10 minute inter· va1s. ' The first boats ,will start arriving in Ensenada, 125 nautical miles away early on Friday. The complete list entries (including i he dropouts) will be found . on Page 8 of today's DAILY PILOT. SA Fish Cance r aearings Hear Expert Testimonies Experts began testimony this morning in Santa Ana at an emergency meeting of the House Subcommittee on Fisheries and Oceanography on the evidence of cancer and other 'abnormalities in fish caught olf the Orange Coast near the mouth of ttie Santa Ana River. In opening the sessio n, Rep. Richard 'f. Hanna (0-Westmlnster) said, "we as a nation cannot afford to remain ignorant or the relationship between ·at.er pollution, fish disease and Jhe effect on humans of eating diseased or infected fisti. "There are those who say that since no clear and convincing link between fish illness and human illness has been proven it is folly to pursue the issue. I disagree. Human health ls at slake. "[ am appalled at the acknowledged dearth of Information available and research being done on the effect fis:1 disease may have on human health. Answers must be found as soon as possible to remove this potential threat.'' 1-Ianna's alarm \\'as backed vigorously by the first witness, Or. Bruce Halstead of the World Life Research Institute in Colton. He told of a "dramatic, classical ex· ample" of more than 100 people sub- jected to fish poisoning in 1958 at Minamata, Japan. , ' "Ovtr one-third of these peop~ died and of the balance half suffered di!ablir.g sicl'nesses. ''I was called an alarmist at the li:ne ~·hen I suggested the possibility of the same thing happening in the U.S. "Admittedly no one can say that diseases from eating fish are the direct cause of human cancer but researchers believe it is possible. It is a valid question which demands an· answer.'' The hearing was to continue '{hroughOut the day in the supervisors meeUna: room in Santa Ana with · more than a doun wiCr>enes scheduled to be.heard_.~ In the Santa Ana bearlnp, one ,..llUI Is sc)leduled to testify on bellall pr the, Orange County ,Sanitation Di.st,riets · to indicate hls belief ther,e is. no >tolid link between sewage outfalls and .can- ci:rous fish. He is Charles T. Mitch.ell, prt&idcnt (Ste FISH, Page %) Coast Freeway F iglat i:. • : .. . Viets Push _Attack . . ·• U.S .-backed Force·D ~ep in CambQdia SAIGOI'/ (UPI) -four tank·led South Vietnamese task .. forces estimated at 9,000 men drove deep into Cambodia today with U.S. air support, and their commander announced they would ·re- main "for n)~ny days" 1 to trap and destroy thousands of Communist troops. in their onetime sanctuary. The main thrust along Highway 1 leading from Saigon to ?hnom Penh ov't:rran the Cambodian tGwns 'of1 Chipou and Prasault, 25 mtles \Jl~de ,Caipbodia, and was pushing westward towp;rds Cam· bodian troops based , at ' Svay •Rieng, 40 Ted Kennedy Says R~ng Not J11stified BOSTON (UPI) Judge James .A.' Boyle, reruting sworn testimony by Edward M. Kennedy, says l he Massachusetts senator was taking Mary Jo Kopechne doWn a road ttiat led only lo a secluded beach the night she drown. ed. Kc'lnedy says he had been taking Miss Kopechne back to drop her off al her motel. Hf' reject~d ••the Inferences and ultimate finding of the judge's report" as not "ju~tified." s0yle, in· his'find1ngs on the celebrated case .. said Kennedy probabl)'. ,wa11d,rlvir\S ~\!hi ~!Ill o~ ·l'D-of-wllel!i<r ~rill!liial charl/!1 ii!la~f bG p.._d , · r.iflii9ll&ii rurtl>et ailtlon •P' ~•~d imjj•OJ•. ' . . r-~-,.,~·~., ti•• .i• ;, • l\lt.s J>opechnt. 21, a rorm!• ""'"tary for Sen. Robert F. Ktnnedy., drowned when KeRnedi'• auto wel)t , or~ a bridge at Chappaquiddick Island, · Mass.. the night of July 18, 1969. The testimony and Boyle's findings at the inquest In Edgarl.rlwn from Jan. 5-8 were made public Wednesday; . . Kennedy .. in h.1s testi mony, said he was taking Miss Kopechne back to her motel room in Edgartown when· be ·made a wrong turn and went 7/JO!hs o( a mile down the wrong road -the road that led across a woOden bridge spanning a tidal pond. The auto .. with Kennedy at ttie wheel , went off the bridge and landed upside down in the pond , drowning the girl. Boyle noted Rveral points that came out in the tesUmony to back his feeling Kennedy and Miss Kopecbne did not intend to go to Edgartown, including: -Miss Kopechne left her purse at the cottage where she and Kennedy had been attending a party for Kennedy friends and "boiler room" girls who had worked In the Robert Kennedy caffi· paign. including Miss KoJ)echne. -Miss Kopechne did not ask her-room· mate al the motel for ttie key to their room before leaving the party. -The ferry that crossed fron1 Chap· paquiddfck Island to Edgartown stopped at midnight, and no special arrangements for a later crossing had been made. Boyle said "I infer a reasonable and probable explanation of the totality o[ the above facts is that Kennedy and Kopechne did not intelld to return to Edgartown at that time ; that Kennedy did not intend to drive to the ferry slip and his turn onto Dil{e 'Road was in~ntional. Having reached this con· clUsion, the question theft ari.&es as to whettier there was an7thing criminal in his operatioh of· the motor vehicle ... "I therefore fin'd 'there is probable cause to beUCve that Edward M. Kennedy (See KOPECHNE, Paae ZJ miles inside Cambodia and 70 a1r miles fr®> Phnom Penh. Three tuk forces estimated at 1,500 each drove into Cambodia ln lhe Parrot's Beat sector wbidl juts into South Viet~ nam to within. 35 miles of Saigon. A fourth .task force of 1,500 pushed across the border from the Mekong Delta town of Kieng Tuong ,to try to cut. Off 15,000 Viet Cong in the area. · So far the ,South VietQam~se report killing ' +45 Viet ·Con& ilnd Nortb Viel· namese troops• and capturing vist sup- plies of equipment at it 'loss of 32 killed ' and .113 wounded, :55 o! lhl ·-ed strafed by m~tak• by U:S. bellCoplU gunships. Two U.S. advllers were repor:ted wounded. " Although a Cambodian spot....,-;, '1n Phnom Penh said his govemment COll!d not approve the allied operaUon, a1n:,ce it viola ted CambodJan neut:aUty, Irons dispatches said the operation wu coordinated with the Cambodlan army to the extent a dozen Cambodians linked up with the advancing Vietnpmese f<Re! as guides. 5·y ear Ody ssey Ov er Newport Glob e-circler Comes Home From Sea A Newport Beach family · greeted a sailor home from · the sea today, five years and perhaps three lifetimes - by the a)'erage man's standards -after he set out to conquer the oceans of CRrltl. Robin L. Gratiam , 21, maneuvered his 33-foot .sloop . Return of the Dove to a berth at Long Beach Marina, after proving he could do what they said couldri't be done by a boy. He was 16.when he began hi's ody~sey. The youngest man . ever to sail alone ar<Mlll!I. tJ>ei (>!<>rid <W~)i-· l!illl .t. "'iatllnlelilil as NI . . ,, iiil!Qlilll' tacked to Its ,dest,in•liWJ..._ ... the C,.P: tai'n's Inn, -uear Seal Btallh. · · · · ., .. liia. IJ>l1'el>ll, Ml<. ·and •!\Ira' .Lylo Griblin, 'of ~13 Sl. Andrtw'I. ROaCll Newpie>rJ Beach, watched ·alon1 with his expectant• wife Patti, ·22, .as the ·Weary sailor arrived. He and his wile each ~et out around the world -in different ways -to find adventure, only to find each o1her in South A(rica. iheY ~eie m·arrie<I In Australia. Graham: who · first conceJV'ed of his monumental voyage while the family lived . in Hawaii, was perhaps too tired to enjoy the gala crowd and spouting fireboats heralding his return. "It's been a long live yUrs," said his mouler, wiitlng under a bright sun. . "He.,.s bohe-tired," said Ii.is father·ln· law. Al Ratteree, of Tocrance . The Grahams and Ratterecs greeted the young sailor aboard their own 1loop1 Club Judo Class Needs Teache r Take this press release however you care to. "The Boys' Club of the Harbor Area Judo Class, which was formed i\1 1966 and ha s a total of 2{I active members, is in need of a qualified Instructor. "Our former instructor, L a r r y Castorena, is no longer able to handle the class." Interested parties may contact Larry Daniell, 'at 842-8372, according to BoyS Club officials. t STOCK MARK~' NEW ·YORK CAP) -The·stOck market continued its downward drift ,this after· noon ar~r an early morning rally failed to gain supix>rt. Trading was slow, (See quotations, Pages 32·33)., ( . the Jovencita, which set tail. at ·(own to escort the Return or the Dov• to its neaUng place. Graham, who set sail July 25, 1915, went through four cats as com1>1UtioDS and two sailboats in the 33,00l).!mile adventure, In which death was · nUr at times. His initial boat, the 24"foot Dove~ limped. into St. Thomas, the V fr g i ~ Islailds, badly leaking,· a~ t W ice dismasted 'by foul weath1:, to be 'reip1aced by the ·larger craft. , · · He'ridloed lhe U.S. COut O,Wd,1'-adl quarters at l!.onl BM ·-w~ aflerni>on that he wo ·1n&oun.r;_; ·ft'ini the wprld -arid 20 mitu ~ IOGth of ll;al! Clmnente, boat and spirits · th ..-..i Jhlt)e, • . I ,· ,~ Navlg6tors It ·the ll t!i CoaSt 1 Gui'rd -District headquarters Jn Lon& Beach ploti. ted his position later 1t J,lve mflel north or Pyramid Head,-the istiii<I'• soutbeni Up. • . During the Jong lone!)' voyage iD wbicli his ports of call · lilcluded Honolulu, SarDoa, Tonga, Fiji, the New Hebrides. CocQs J~IQnd in . the ·Indian Ocef,n. and many more, he experienced dinger fre- queritly. 11 Perhaps the worst was . a . stoml(Off Du~bap, SouQl Afric.a. / · · "He was really worried," aaid hi11 father, "the waves broke the port light and flooded -the inside. 1blngs wert oy. !ng 11;11 9yer the bo~t. ije j~t prayed .•. " JUSt prayed. . . " ' The ' journey remtritscent of renowned Sir Francis Chictster's -traruoceanie' 1t1lo voyages came near dl!aster off .the trea'cherou11 Cape of Good Hope too. He also dove into the stotm1wept In· dian Ocean at 2 a.m. one ·time, to retrieve a broken mast and on ' another occasion the · small · craft was nearly run down by a towering freighter. · Besides the fact he will become · 1 father in July, almost on the filth an· niversary of his start. Graham's future is uncertain. He is a hig.h school dropout, but has an education denied most human beings. TV Man Al J arvis Reported Improved Former disk jockey and television per. aonatity Al Jarvis has ·been •moved :from the intensive care to~sub.fntenslve unit it Hoag Memorial Hospital. Jarvis, who suffered · a· heart attack, 'fas reported to be in improv.ed, condlUon allhoUgh he is\ stlll not allowed to hav~ visitors. Jarv s i.s a longtime NeWpOn BeacH resident. Orange 'fhe Harbor Area Freeway Fighters "'·1n hold a meeting at 7:30 o'clock to- night in the Newport Harbor HJgh School auditorium . ' The t 100-seat-auditorium was rented because' the freeway fighters expect a large crowd after thei_r ".Block the Free- way" circular was distributed to 24,000 households this week. Huntington Hits :Badham ReroutiQg Wea dter Suhshine ls lhe order of tile ~ay tot Friday, with temperatures 'In the shimmerinc 70'• along tht coast and up to • sizzllnc 80 -. grees further inland~ ·.. ·-· The Freeway Fighters want to stop PaciHc Coast Freeway from coming through Newport Beach and destroying the marine • oriented environment of the city. They have launched a petition effort and have thou sands of signatures .. "We won't kno,w how many until to· nii;bt . They ha ve been coming in three or rour different pla ces." said ?o.farshall DuUield, Freeway Fighters acting chair· nlan. . Duffield said peUlions will be circula· tcd another two or three weeks. lte said city traffic engineer Robert .Taffe will descril>e the Pacific Coast Freeway route as It is presently en- gineered. There also will be maps and aerial pbotDgraphs showing the adopted Coast Fr~way route. By ALAN>DIRKIN ' Of ... D91tr:· '""' ..... ' A street s!gD marked "No Way" in clear lettering would tYx>ilY reaction in · Huntington Beach,today to Assemblyman Robert Bad.ham's propoul to re-route Pacific Coast Freeway. "It would be nice lf we didn't have' tu have the freeway do,vn by the coast bi.it it's there because it's ner:essary," City Engineer William Hartge com· men led. He was discu!lsi ng a plan put rorward by Badham C'ft...Newport Beach) to route the Coast Freeway around Newport and ii.$ Corona del Mar Community. To do so would mean changing freeway pat.. terns Jn central Huntington Beach. City traffic engineer Paul Cook and Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- • tington Beach) also er«~ 1Badham's proposal with akepti lllll· "~t wouta. cause tremendous surfa'ce street problems in Huntington Boacli," I Burke said. . . Cook responded wllh, "It would choke ' up the othet freeways ." ~ , . ,. , Under 'Badham's pl~n ~11e ,PacUlc Coast r Freeway would be deleted cast of 1 tllc 1 proposed Roule 39 In Huntington Beach~ I Roote 39 Is planned to l)e an eiliht·1ane rrec.vay running north-south hair a 10ilc to the eastjof, Beach Boulevard, roughly . along Newland StrCfll. Badham's pi:oposal would meal) t~t ~~~ea~~~ ~oa:~!Tr::n~a~!~~~~ the coast and through Newport It be sent up lho Rou.te l9 Fr~\l'•Y and il!>Ok~. •IP , to the San Diego Freeway and then the _L Corona de1 Mar Freeway, thus bypas~ Jng the HarbOr Aiea. . Whlle Badhatn says the Idea to skirf; Col'ona del ·Mar is bis,,Sta'te Sen. John Schml\z (R.'f'.u4ti!1) concµrs , and 1ay.1 , the 'Jeglslafors will present similar bills in both houses of the Leg\Sla{ure. 1 1''rom· Sac11amepto, Burk~ l s.ald .t~al he understood, Badham's ma J1 concerri Is lor the rrce)'t'3Y to by'f>as1 Uie Hfrbcif Artil: end thal how ttiat could be done .wat, scoond.1ry. ' ~ ~ 1 My rirst reeling Is that altempts have been made over and over by )eglslators to change decisions 'Of the state Highway Commissi on by elimlnatlng or changing freeway. r<1U'teSi but until now the Legislature h.as stopped all efforts or this 'kind because or th~ prececteht it woold set. From then on , every freeway J'()Ule . decision would be made in the Legislature." The Aasemblyn;um went on, "If he'i successful, il \IOU!~ be a real bti surprise to me. It Would t>e a prec.edent-aetUng move that would be mighty dirrlcull lo accomplish. ' Asked w~cther he felt there wa:oi I need ror . the Pacific Coa-t ' Frteway Jn Huntln~ton Beach and Newp011 Beach, Burl<e replied. "Onfe I questioned the ·real need for It, ljlil I dOn 'l hove much "doul)t abou,t It no\v. You can go dQwtj any day ,an~ '!"-Ule oeed. And' that"s not Just local llalflc thele, ti's· thlough trafUc." • . • · .. • Tiie llwr.i•k'r considered the Jreewai: plans loo, lttr ~ong ,lo mlki 1 ,change'. "My reacl!On Is that !f ht •• 1_,.iul [_ (Sit Fllt:EWAY, Pl~'I)"' , INSIDE ~DAl' . Th e "Cable cor nomtd dc1lrc!': f rolled up to a $~0.000 poyof/ /Or tht oirl who lost more than· hf1 htort . in So» Fratt.tjsco. 6~e I Page 4. ' ;f~ DAii. Y PILOT ' . , .. 'r " , ,. , DAIL.Y I'll.OT f'lllft 'W Slt'lt ~II WINNING TEAM -Members of Oranae_ Coast CDI-. _,etl•Alnd Don Siielnore. On tractor (~om left)_ lire lege speech team took time out from their prepare· JJan Blanke .. hlp, . Nick Caterino, Ly,U !!•~, tions for next week's national competition io,pose Pifrce Luca~J.Eric Samuel59n, Dorothy MaCMWan for this portrait. Team members include (standing ana Mike Mooaus. from left) Rita Wakely, Debby Brucher, Cathy Bar· . - ,OCC Debaters · s~ramble Top U.S. Team to Defend Ranking in Nationals By STEV!; Mrl'CllELL Of the Dall'I' l'lllt Sl•ff Competition Is the nime of I.he game for Orange CoQt Collog's forensic .team. nw,, 1pteeh team, rated tops in the nation, will attempt to .maintain ita na._. tloaJI rankln& at the National Forentic Tournament May 4 ihroul§b May 9 at the Uplverslty o! Michigan. 'I1:ie team bu an impressive list ·or victories for the 1969-70 season, including l!jne aweopotakea trophies. Mias Barbara Burgess, director of the team and an assistant professor cf apeech at OCC aa,Ys, 0 The enthusiasm of the tum members at th.ls 11ta1e of lhe pme b tremeodoos. My office hll been • fluny o! activity u the twelve jum. members research 5peecb matlrill ud practkt for the nationals." Each lltudoot apenda at least 15 hours • -.· outalde o! cl..., 111 preparaUon fir lle·dlamplon9h!Pll. ''Tbb doel not include time speot by the team In f- riWnl projects to -oc;c to the D1Uooall, ''explained Miu Burgeo. 1be forensic team has raised nearly '3,tlllO .ol lhe funds needed lo send the entire tlam to tl1e 'Mfcbiagn contest. ~ Sl,000 Is needed, according to Ille spOoch director. What motivates memben of the team to spend so much time and effort on a project that brings neither profit or ~·~ "'' ... .......,.,. un1wo. MOit rnembtr1 Gf the team believe the improvement or communication is the primary rusoa for partlcipatlng on die team. "MOit of the business world today tanBOt c:ommunicate effectively,'' says LyaJ Herq, team debator. "Com· muntcation ii vitally important - especlally in today'• complex world." H41'10S ii presently carrying II uni ts at OOC and wcrkl full-thne at a motel In CoolaMeu. . ~ team debator. Mike MUdaus, wu drawn to the rpeech team because ol hiJ inttreet in llw. "Speaking and oommunlca~ are 1he mMt important auetl to the lqal profession," he says. 1be young debator is presently working 25 howl *' weel: at a HunUngton Beach d~ent More in additlon to carrying 18 Wllts at Coast. Another benefit ol lhe speech team ts the · excitement of ~petlng with DAILY PILOT CMMU•COMT l'~lttO COM~AllY l•'-t H. W--4 l'ruidlolit • ,.nu. JKk I. Cltrlty Yb~ ..... ~I MolMtW" ''nttM•t ICtt•il ·-711011111 A. Murpliift• M-J~ Ed!lor Tllofl'ltt ftrfWRI tkwtort IMCh Cllt l"'11w N ............. Oftlc• 2111 w.,, •• 1~ •• ····'···" M1111ftl A44rHlt P.O. I•• 1115, t266J ...... ...._ ee.11 M ... : nt Wut ••1 Sired """' 8#<11: ftl f'O..,,I ,.,,..," ~ •1MJ11 11111 .. «fl .........,.,.. ~ ~: :ID.I Mwttl I.I CtmlM RMI ~L· f other colleges and · lttdfvidual speikers, according to . Miss Burgess. She noted that the rompetltion can 1et quite rug- ged, referring to a recent toumamtnt where team . debator Lyal . Henog lost seven pounds durlng the two.day verbal boul The team'• 300 indlvidual hours of speech competition should make them a ronnidable opponent in the nationala next week. · ·The nine sWeepstake wins acquired this seaS>n by the team are i9<ficative or the drive of its members and their will to win. The record: ·-In November the team won its first sweepstakes trophy at the. Riverside City ~ll.eae Juninr Collete I n v l i a t I o n a I imat!tiig'hr";1'ie lilCllvlclual lrophles and 22 certificates of merit. Tbat same month the team competed ror the first tlDie in· the Weatem States ChampklnllhiPll lgalnst 29 · CollelfO 'lnd imlventtles --edging oot L..tla ind Clirke Unlvertlty 1od the Unlverait, or Arizona for the first p 1 a c e sweepstakes. -In December OCC won first place 11weepetakes at the Pacific Southwest Collegiate Forensic Association Cham- pk>nllhl~ •. ....:January found the team at the Western States Junior College Rtgional where the team won six trGphles and 18 certificates ol merit. -In Fetiruary ,the team competed In the Long Beach State Coll~ge National Invitational Tournament and took first place sweepstakes in the junior divia1oo. -March competition provided perhaps the most impressive win for the OCC team at the Spring Rivers ide InvitaUonal Junl9r. College Tournament where Coat defeated. Odes.sa Cblltce. the national champlonfhlp·team of 111119. . -Following the Odessa upset, OCC't speakei:I gabJed momeptum and took three more . Champloriatilp sweertstike vlclorles In prepataUon !or the n1ll0nol championship c:ompetlUon In lillchf&an". From Page .1 KOPECHNE ••• operated his motor vehicle negllgtntly on a way or in a place ta which the public have 1 rlaht of acceu ud that such operatJon appears to have con- tributed to the death of Mary Jo Kopechne." Kennedy, in a statement i11ued throuah his Washington office, said "At the in- quest, I truthfully auwe.red all QUeitions Frotn P"fJe 1 FISH ..• of Marine Biological Cafi.,!uH.a nts, Inc., of 407 E. Bay St., Coat& Mesa. In prepared testimony to the com- mrttee, Milchell declared, "The oc· c u r r e n ce of fishes with anomalo\Js growths or disease in areas of waste discharge (both industrial and domestic ) is by no means a recent event. Such fi...hes have been collected as early as 1922 in San Francisco Bay. The California Department of fish and game has documented the problem lince 1951 in the l..()s Angeles are1 . "Similar reports can also be found for British Columbl11, Wulllnglon, Long Beach and San Dieao. The euct etiology of lhe.!e aboormal arowthl aod laloos on fiahet · in-these• areas remains a mystety deSplte' tlie wolk -of many fn. vesttptors. HistaJoglcal studies hive ln- dlcaled the!< papllloma ""' not malig- nant bti\ probably c1used b)"'mech1nk=aJ, chemtcll Or, lnMous Irritation. "The occurrence of thllf:' fishes is · not limited to areas near domesUc discharges; fishes exposed to 3 to 10 pe"'Cent dilutions of water from Domin- gues Channel in Los Abgeles Harbor developed ltsions within IZ days and many died even alter removal to clear water. .. In lhe .,...,...-o1-preatnl bloloS1c1I survey we haYe m1dl·2t separate beathlc trawls (in AUgll!t 'ahcf Novemb:tr, 1159 and February 1970) within 6 miles of th. presen t Orange~ Ocean ,~tfall. Almos! 8,000 fishes bHe been catitw'td represenUng a species. · 0 About one-half of the9e ftsbes have been captur<d wjlhln 100 yards of the ootlall. Appioxlmitoly I' J>"l'O<nt of these li-btted either peplll0m1 ot l..ions ""Oii" the .. _fins. All were white croakeri:, a fish not &eneraJly used for COO• sumption. Of this total approlim1tely 2' indlviduala hid papllloma. Two dewer IJOle have been c1ptured with p1pllloma, bo:.:1 collected aome distance from the outfall. "The preaent 11.1rvey, under way 8~ AU{"st . 19119, will not only su pply ba.und data for the oa tfa U u n d • r contttuclliin -bill will' lls6 monitor ~!ties ip the area C)( the exlst.iJ11 ciitl'all aller lli ofierat!On hll eta.wt!." \, asktd of me. 1' .my personal view, the inferencts and ultim1te flndin& of the judge's rePort are not jultiijed and I reject. them. "~ ~facts of this incident alt now .fully publit/' he added, ''and ~ual judgm~ and underst1ndlng resb ,where Jt belongs. For myself I· plan no further statement on this tragic matter. Both our families have suffered enoush from public utterances and speculations." In his findings , Boyle did J10t bring up the questlon or why Kennedy walled !IXnt nine hours before reporting the •cddut lo Edgartown police. Leslie H. Leland, the foreman of the Dukes County Grand Jury, which Clft April 7 ended a whirlwind probe of the 1ccidenl without returning an in-- dlctment, s1id there wu a "poS&lblUty" of reconvening the jury atthoU(lh ht hadn:t 11considered it yet." ' Leland Will have lo mate. up .hi1 mind by Mly 11 when a new:, 1rand Jury Is 5elecled;·111hough-theortUcaily llOlhlng would stand ht the way of the new JIO'l' taking u_p the case. From Page 1 FREEWAY •.•• In elfmtn1Un1 the freeway at Beach Boulevatd and Adams Avenue oa muth, I see no reuon for the Coast, Freeway ·1rom that !><lint nortb. · · "It weufd cau!f: tttmendol\I lt.lrlace strttt probleths," Burke contlnUed. "You woukl have Route 39 and the Coast Freeway both dumping beacbgoers at that point. It would mike no sense." City Engineer Hartge Pointed out 'that state Division of Highways shidies would determine whether Badham's rerouting would work. "I think It'• necessary to have a : freeway i..'fit some Placta ll1on& the'' coast... ,• . Traffic ~neer Cook 'sakl:· ."It sbounds to me like it would mean j>lllUng all the traffic on .Rgult 39 and the San , Diego l,....ays which aln!ady have heavy projected traffic vohimes of their own. "You can take a lb>k out of ~ 1,.iem and 111 you •ocoinplilll ti bi omlold the system. It would choke up till other freeways.'' · Cook also pointed out that the 1t1te has acquired lighb of way al.., lhe beachfroot and lower Beach Boulevard for tht freeway. . . The traffic engineer agreld 'lflth Burke that t.he idea wou ld overburden turfact 11treets. . "! don't know what It would do to Adams Avenue, Hamilton Avenat and Coa st Highway traftlc Into Cost• Mesi and Ne"'P"r\ B~_ct>., Jh~ brl~i•t there i re oveiloaded now at weelr:tndi." ..... ...... .. • • 1;~ Curio11ity '-·~ ... _ .) t,lV ExpertS . Quizzed; 1 ; -.&::" JI ~!"get <iluiht ahoji---~Wti were lOld that ~lfnliii or el&hl years lralnl,. In !cho9l .In the · Jlliirfi •'11111 liiie oft Jprlvatt ~~:puu'°atlrealarm1ce crlmes •. · f~·.o!-law and ,,)'Oa're ~orng to~ ' -II> I ,._ · f!ri atann•· €an ' 'Cal!\J'.!!'-\n,l'~that usuaUy Juvenile~_ at.a d<Sadva'!lage.'.J . Pl 1 4181 ., i.IJ?'" . 1 • , ·.. ,. younptm pnder 18) aren't detaJnbci , Anoth er boy ..anted to know what .J\I~ .IO.~ J~I? ,. , , • -' by. police. ·"In at'l least tO. ptrctnt .of . type of crime, a . juvenile , would have do ,you ~inik\.1-dtJsen~i arrest? the case& we take tM infonnatlOn •11td· to commit to get a joey trial.· · · Can you lboot a.,.._ iG.fOl,Jl'-home? wrke·a ... repott and rel~you'""t..)'(IUI' ~ •t,~t iqe. present. Ume you are -not:, Ate there many wOpMrJlidps? parents.'' he ~d. , ~ _. entitled to a trial," Ju.die Schmidt said. _, Thlrtoio> llld 11 Jilr Olds at !nafin But tho atudenti were told thal lao't Aaslatant Clly Altotney O'Neil polnled · · JciJol · · the end of JL " out the law .\vi th· respect lo juvenili!i• lntei!Dedllto . In N...,,..i ,.se.cll ~ juvenlle officer lllu to ·llie flO!tllls i• <hinging. You now hive the rll)Jt 8IUd Ille ~ W~. · Ud 'triel to decide what la needed to lo call wltneS&es and lo conlroot the, Ana1'on wore If.VI!' 117 • .Judp, a comet the attu&Uon Depenilln( Upon ac<1«•e1-. he noted, and In just the la!l pOllCi copCaln,•T f~ pob!l<.'~ander ~JI» -... erlty ol tbO crime, the y...,,.1., monlh you hive been _ntended the 111ne , and a dtpuet · cllltrtCt -~ ~ • m'ay alao .bave to appear in JUvenUe !1'!',t ·~ ~ adult to be coovkted only• ~ ......,. lo 'lhe ~~~ Munlcl-' Judre c.tvln Sellmldt 11, proven gullly beyond • reailOIUiblt -~ ID I P'opll1l ... ,,--, ..,..... ., l'S" • doubt." . '.i natlonll -.lllCO nldaJ. 61 Ll1r ~-.. Id. · . He said It <'OU id cause -quite 1 pro!ilem, A· .almlllr' """1 &poU to• N~ He &lid II fl!t got • youlh In t.ralfie II juveniles are grante\f the rtgl>t to;. HU11ir, .... 8chool ..,....,. ,.......,... court for drivlq •car w!lboo!\ 1,U,,.,,.. a Jury_ tllal, perhlf>I causing a need '""''. ·......-. ·,~ ho mlgllt req1lire .in. !"'l'' an b$i for double lhe number of, cow1a and aod)lllf a~ Ntwpol't ~ ~ •,pd ·c111zaa. ll>jl-he ·can do · •.JOI d0u~le the niimltttof Jucl,es. ' , clvba. are hi"°' Ln liaJ ~ -!M". pretty • -nil· whatever jlo Wiiiis JI, was noled .that juveniles have a-, ttail w..tk'. .. -r . to. ~ wtmfld. • · • rigl\t adult's don't have -to have theii1 "La-ii Day -ttllbllshed by~-.· . JJ"fle Scfunldt. told -the ~"!'la police record sealed and not made public. · El.tm!>o\<er to cootrul wfO>',.. lritdf· .• ~' 1ulhorltle1 · "can put YOO! In The studonls were tof~: -They could_ . · . . T ., , !uvenlle Hill~ 1 folier-.home, I ~al shoot a prowler ln their home. ''The~ lion&! dlaplay o1 nitlllli7 uilOI bi Ille. ,;,cl>OOI, 1 -k.~llQ -llld keep. you 11w pmumts ·, person en!erlq you~; COmmunla!& "!' M~y 0,,-. Tllo,""""' ke. ~ an)'tlllpJ'}'OI! can <9DCOlve borne is threatening you with a doadly pa.nell were ai:r-~ bj'N~~ , of,'as.puo~nt~we'can dO:" for«: But tf you want to have a good Al~ Clt)''lt!>nieY lleliiiia O'il~-'.. ile 'ml -~·u you kj!ep commiliJng case you helter nol sliOol him lit ·the• ·At Sn!lan Sdlool. Newport POllC.o P~ >Ibo aa'!1!'"1sne !he jienalty gets more batk when he ~ lea•lng," Evans siid. · Jbn ~Parker ~ec1~ a · queatlco;abottt-,. atteni. It• geta to the__po!Dt where 'I've -\heY· can make a citizens arrest. hoW .a ~tro{inln ·-111 lln"' _II . ho 1 IOl1o ~.llQCfefy m>m you." • "Th< police 91!1cer'a duly is lo determine· ~ • . mini bike . ~ on-·pt!t•te A. boy W,li!led tel ~ If the accused If a crlm< bu been commltled. II one Pl<!iin1 whatber·the ~,bad -hu to• bate ... ~y or It ·ho can has, he b under obllg~tlon lo w1a1-w~··¥<''"· · . · . , .. ,..,,.eMil labnleU: • . • a pe-jn ivaklng a [awful · arro&t. 1Tfte ume offt~ are rm~, 1:? . •''YeJ, ·you can ,repreient youraeU," But if you mtke an unlawful 111'.W the ..m..area,fl lhe ~ ie<",1..~ . lloberl $!dimer, Joriner publlc 'del.,.jer you are liable lo be sued," Capl. Parlir P1rker said. ~~·-Iii~,, . '· .. now in ;llf(ya&e law Jl'ICjice~ replied.. said. : lelkrlrllkeyould~: __ , ,'"But ,.U)blve to convince the court -There aren't many women Judges. . He l1Jo 11.kl • file 11 kept pa bleycle you are capable of repreaentm, yourself -'There is one in the county, ~ mayb& I~ ~birl and the ~ -~ "apinst 1 Il)an lite Mr. Ev• (Wiiliam five X~cent througho~~ the 1iJte ~~ ''.wad contact ~ pare$ ....... _..__.Ev.,,., deputy dlllrlcl attorney; allo on 1Qe 111111Uclpll and_supenor cnw:t lerils, . trouble ,IGr you. lhe panel). Mr. Evtlllll bu bad seven Judge Scbml<!t wd. Tragedy Averted··: As Tot Rescued In Newport Pool A Newport Beach toddler was reported In goOd condition todsy .at Hoag Hospital after she nearly · drow~ Wedn"41ay in her .11wimmln&· pool. Firemen said Senta Berghahl, .2, tht daii&hter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Bergqaltl of 900 Almond Place was pulled from the water by her mother and sister. .A neilhbor of the Bergdahls', Robert French. ~ave the child 'lnOlltb to mouth resuscitation while another neighbor. Irene Flolpr, pumped ._w. from tho little glr~ • . . • . ' • , .. The fire dopartrn'°I ~ ~ gave t~e child orypn and repOrted she waa breathing by the tjme they arrived at . . . . · Mldletl A. ....,. "'"' " .. • • ' the "'"""1111 MR; GARIBALDI.NOT THE . ONLY FISH IN THE S_EA tP. 171 ~~·..,.~-:;-~·;;;;::;;;;;~;;;;;;~;:;~~;;;~~~=:;;:=;;:;;~:;;;;~::;;;~~r:::,;:;;--. ·BiGBEDROOM~sALEf .. . , . - ~ ~ fortnll it.11.n .. .,.._ Yc>U;d p;plCt to cwt mucti, rn11ch mortl sa~ on elegant triple dresser bedrooms by Lenoir House ·~11111 ·-.. lnellldft ...... Plftl .. '.' utiM d"l!IMr. l'lllrror, •N ~ '4JOll'lt Mffbofinl. °""''' lll lA tllM' . -.• outs .. ndint N iel ' • $29·9··~.~~~~1~~. -. . lp11'-a.t . f1lt.ie tfttt T.W. S,6,00 _.,. SEE OUR FULL FAG~ AD.IN l'AMlLY WEEKLY-MAY t H.J.GAR~ETT fURNf[URE PROFESSIONAL 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIO~ DE,SlpNIR$ 0!"" Moo, Tllon. l Fri. I'!'-~OST/I _!,fESA, CALIF., .. •. ..~ ·-·'· ·--'· . ' 646-027i ' ... '4'.1>27f · ---·--... _.. ... ___ . --· -. ---~ ----------- .. ' .. • I • ' > ' .. .. I r ,, ' ,t 1. ~ •• ,, ! ' , . . ' ' ' , l . • • ' t , t • \ i ' I ' ! l ~ ;· ' • ' --. ....... ... ·~ , .. "''-· •"'11 !ti, 1970 N DAILY rJLOT J f -READY, SET, GULP -MILTON TORELL OF CORONA•DEL MAR' AND. Ci1RISTINE DENIS OF HUNTINGTON BEACH REJ.DY FOR . ' . ' . . .. . .. '.FINAL ~XAM' OFF CATALIPiA .. . Down to the Cta~sroo~·~Glllg~ READY FOR DIVE, JEANNETTE MONTGOMERY TOTES ' STORY BY STEVE MITCHELL AND PHOTOS BY MIC HAEL A. SALAS SCUBA DIVER THReADS THROUGH KELP 'FOREST' Scuba Students Meet at Bottom of OCC's ·Pool : Dean \\'estgaard has the most unusual classroom at Orange Coast .CoUcgc. His 48 students meet twice a wttk at !he bollom of the OCC Olympic-size swi m- ming pool. Westgaard is the junior college's only certified underwater instructor and he teaches both skin diving <'.nd scuba diving to three or his physical edu:ation classes. The 18-week scuba class is being of· fcrcd for the sceond time at OCC and l.s worth two unit.<; of college credit to students completing the underwater course. "A semester of skin diving at OCC Is the only prerequisite for the scuba class," Westgaard explained. "The fir111 portion of the skin diving course lakes place at the pool where the student~ learn the basics of water safety and diving skills. The latter part of the course lakes place in the ocean," he continued . The .scuba diving course involves one hour of lecture a week and two hours of pool training in additio11 lo ocean dives. The students arc provided with scuba tanks and regulators but must supply their own fins, masks and other equip. ment . Beginning this fall . students will be required to pay $10 to defray the cost of boat trips to Catalina Island and other ocean dives. The scuba classes take at least three ocean di¥es during the semester and each class goes to CatGlina for a oite-day boat dl ve. The Catalina trip Is com- parable to fina l examinations, according to Westgaard. "Most of ilie students who enroll in the scuba classes finish the course with a cerUllcate from the National Associa- tion of Und~rwater In st r u ct ors , • ' Westgaard said. The certificate Is the only card !hat Is accepted inte rna tionally, he explained . In addition to !he skin diving and 6cuba classes, Westgaard has also in- DISTAFF bfVER TAKES MERMAID POSE and offshore islands. itiatcd a Skin and ScU"Ja Cl..r.i at Orange Coast. The new club is open to present <i nd past OCC underwater stud,fitll. Plans are underway for scuba trips lo Mexico "\Ve arf even corisidering 11 trip lo lhC' Carribean Sea," We:ttgaard con· cludetl, - CdM '• GRANVILLE CONNOR CUTS ABALONE CATCH SUBMERGED STUDENTS OBSERVE SEA LIFE I , I > • • . ' I ' . I April • 1970 ' •. A 11 1 .. el * 1 for your ~ome •.• at IC!Vfngs af aver &l''.1.-0-boautlful Spanish consoles haw lots of l!Ofago space behind 2 CXJN8d • C:Joors. Your choice of pecan, or • green ••• if you hu'.ryl . -. $58-- LIST 129.95 ........ . , DH't Miu 11111 lieouttful Spanish' solo with a dl~lnctive diamond tufted seat ••. and loose pillow ba'*l,Save 'h no~~· tailored·£~ lecthoi:Hko . vinvf Wlth exposed oa~ trim! tn1s wiO. 5011 fastl . LIST 299.95 •••• 'ISO · •• ' ..... c-fei1•1tle c ........... this handsome rocker is covered in a heavy tweed with. a box pleated skirt and exposed rich wood accents! DeeP., r~versible f90m .. ~t c:,·,shi~nl More than Y2 offl · , . . . . s7·· ·. UST 169.?~ .. ; ..... . . . The •-rt .. .,...,. will toko home this rich walnut Bossen triple CtresSer' wilh Micofta toP. framed plate gloss . mirror and full or queen size ·headboard at tt'ie biggest SOV· ings ever! LIST 259.95 ... , .$12 7 ' ' Ole, -WI ..... tltll ftf• ..a Spa•lsh <>=Slooal tablts In dark . 9Ql<. ~ by rich . ttirv· l"lj ~ llai. tops. PI.ti< from cocktail or end styles white the savings are .... 9'9'11estl UST 79;t~, •••••••• $38 , · All -i. Ille ltelel Famous Kroehler qoolily ••. Striking Mediter· raneqn, st-y1ing ••• great, big savings! This Mediterranean sofa has deep, revers;ble, foam seat cushions and is Scotchgard protoctedl See ii nowl Save mbre than .¥21 LIST 299.95 .••• $146 ' • Oli,_i,a, lel Fr0!1C~ .~ovincial ,oin:. -, ing roo"! sui!9 by_ Bassetti This g~a~-.. ful set includes the oval table and · il 2" ieaf pluS 4 ~de chairs with u"' holstered seats. ' LIST 379.95 . . .. $19 7 . . ...... • ...... Hy? Tofe home this famous Kroehler rec(iner at o low sOle price! Sit qown, recline, feel·· ~ the tensions melt away! It is tailored in viiiyl in o choice of colors[ Hvrry· for thisl LIST 119.95 ........ $68 . . . . A :S•pc. ch...,.rl Th is handsome Colonial living room group includes the sofa and chair for one·. ~ow price! Available in print fabrics! The sofa Ond ·chair have reversible seat -.. ' ... .. .. ... . . . . ....... ' • ... -· ·t . . . • • • •• ·1 J . . Day by day, hour by hour we are finding thousands of items in ouf. warehouse we. didn't ::.: know .we had! At this printing '287,000 worth of name brand merchanr:/ise. has been un-·" covered ... or should we say discovered in our warehouse . 'J ,;. and .this · is just the ' beginning!! Crews are working "round the clo·ck'' to make this.the most exciting, value . How would you like to buy 1 s149 BAR for $60 ' At~:·l.15! ' Here's your-chance of a lifetU. room in your home at prices ·.l HERE IS A PARTIAL LISTING . Can you imagine a We're "giving away'' a • • --· . . ' I s149 RECLINER for s72 ..._S-J_9_9_· Dl-NE-T:T_E_for ... s9_s__.: j AMERICA'S MOST FAMOUS QUALITY BRANDS INCLUDE[ • -"1 · We're Unloading ••• What a buy! s109 TABLES for sa· After-Inventory Closeouts RECORD Give your home. ii note of .elegance! . SOFA & ... cushions and maple b<ick wings!:·· · · ,_ ___________ _. LIST 26-4 .95 ...• $166 s29 CABINOS for s17 $499 LOVESEAT ;or $z97 I•••• It De ..... teltle1 a•e crafted in richfv· groined Walnutl You choo1e from cocktail or ern:f tables • . . either for ·one low price while they lostl Be at Levitz when the doors open I'" LIST 69.95 ......... $38 MHl11eekllellclMa whenyou servo Jhem. on this dramatic Spanish dining rpOfn headlined by on oc· tagooal _pede~ol table with Jwo 12" leavesplU. .1 arm o•d 2 ~d,, chaics with VlnYl upholstered seats ond bacbl · UST459.9S .... $296 Partial Listing/ l , -10 ' A.M. to 10 P.M. Bring your Car, Trailer, Pick Up, Station Wagon ... Take it with you Or We'// deliver for a small charge ... Big Savings either way! ... LEvlTi. WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM, BEACH BLVD., . . ,. I Easy to Reach from Anywhere · OVER 3000 PIECES FROM OUR FABULOUS SHOW-ROOM Will BE CLOS~t . ' , . . .. •• • . I I . I ~j VOL.6l, N,O, 103, l . SECTIO,NS.,4~ PAGES ' ' ORANGE COUNT'!', CALIFORNIA TH URSDAY/ Al'RIL JO'. 1970 TEN. CENTS -' J(ei:i~edy · . . ~· Says Ruling Unju.~tified ,j,\OSTQN" (UPI) .-Judge James A. poy'e. ·. refullng1 sworn testimony by EdWard'. • M. Kennedy, says l he M~sSachusetts senator was taklni Mary Jo KoPechne ·down a rOad that led only te a secluded beach the :night she drown- ed. • Ke'llledy says he had beeR taking Miss KopeclUle back to drop her off at her motel. He rejected "the inferences and ultimate finding of the judge's report" as not "justilied." Boyle, In his findings on the celebrated case. said Kennedy probably was driving negligently . He lefl open tbe matter of whether criminal charges might be pressed -although further action ap- peared unlikely. Miss ·Kopecbne, 28,.a former secretary for Sell. Robert F. Kennedy, drowned v.·hen Kennedy's auto went off a bridge al Ch"appaqillddick Island ," Mass.. the night of July 18, 1969. The testimony and Boyle's findings at the inquest in Edgarltlwn from · Jan. f>-3 were made public Wednesday. Kennedy, in hi s testimony, said he was taking Miss Kopechne back to her motel room in Edgartown when he made a wrong turn and went 7/IOths of a mile down· the wrong road -the road that led across a wooden bridge spanning a tidal pond. The auto, with Kennedy at the wheel, went off the bridge and landed upside dow11 in the pond , drowlling the girl. Boyle noted several points that c'ame out in the testimony to back his feeling Kennedy and Miss Kopectme ·dicl not hit.end' to go to Edgartown, iecludJng: -Miss Kopechne left her purse at !he co\ta1e where she and Kennedy had befri attending a party for Kennedy friends · and •'boiler rooih" girls who had worked i11 the Robert Kennedy cam· paign,. including MBs Kopechne. -. . -.tlA 1 .l i l OAtlV PllOT ti•H P'htN POLICE. COLLECT SUSPEC·T AFTER KNIFING Albert Scuteri Held In Hospital Ass•ult I Mesa Hospital 1 Worker Stabbed; Janitor Held ,A hollsekeeper. al ·• .€o.U. Mesa oon-valescent hospital wu stibbed in the back five times following. a quarrel with a fellow empJoye Wed11esday. A 64-ycar· old janitor dral,(ecl the ~~er of(. . Mrs. Vir~-. :Kerby, 48; head housekeeper -at hie facility at 2055 Thurin f.•!e., was listed ' In 1 serious condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. argued. w~ Scuteri ~ l\lfned io lcaye. . The eveafs'were withessed by 'jtnltor Elmer Lee, 54, ·who" aalcl; he hur.d. the conver&a.Uon .betwcen vidfm ·and Qpect. "'WhePI she turned,• ScQteri pulled a lqttre ·oai of his poc;tet and1 itab~ hef tn.t!ie back," Lee t'bJd poll«. -· • . Viets Push. Attack U~S.-backed Force Deep in Cambodia . ' SAIGON !UPI) -Four lank·led South Vietnamese task forces ' estimated at 9,000 men drove deep into Clmbodia today with U.S. air sqpport, and ibeir commander announced they would re· main "for many days" to .trap and destroy thousands or -Communist troops in their onetime sanctuary. The main thrust along Highway l leading from Saigon to Phnom Penh overran the Cambodian towns of Chlpou and Prasaull, 25 miles inside C4Rlbodia, Rnd was pushing westward towards Cam· bodlan troops based et Svay Rieng, 40 Mesa Top~ess Tavern Asks Halt to Raids Owners of a Costa Mesa taVern turned topless in recent weeks appealed tO an Orange County Superior Court judge \\;ednesday to ban alleged poli~e bar· assment. a~d unlawful · proeecutlon. 'i'he action ti'y Ray Rohm and Doris Crownover, prOlJrietors of the Fireh~se, 177 E. 17th St., was followed wilhin a few hours by another visit by vice orricers to the premises. Vanessi York, 23, and ~ager Keith Steve,1s, 2%. were cited for entertaining without a city peri,nit -latest amonc seoree of iUCh citations -althouah Miss · York. was'fuJly claii. Gardena attorney, Berrien Moore too~ . miles Inside Cambodia and 70 alr milts from Phnom Penh. · Three task forces estlm1ted at J,500 each drove Jnlo Cambodia In the Parrot's Beak sector which juta Jnto South Vlet- nam to within 35 mlleJ of ,Saigon. A rourth task force of 1,500 pu'lhed across Lh11 border from the Mekong Delta town of Kleng Tuong to try to cut off 15,000 Viet Cong In the area. So far the. South Vi~lnamese report killing 445 Viet Cong 4nd North Viet- namese troops and cap~µring vast SIJP- plies of equipment ·at a loss of 32 killed and Ill 'wounded, M of the woundocl !ltrafed by milt.Ike by U.S. hellca,a.r iunships. Two U.S. ldviler1 wwe feported wounded. _. Altbouab a Cambodian apokllmu In Phnom Penh said his government couJd not approve the altled operat!ori, ilnce lt violated Cambodian neutrality, fron' dispatches said the operation was coordinated with the Cambodiln ~ to the extent a dozen .Cambodians, Unted up with the advancing Vietiiamae' forces as guide!. 539 Set Sail I Fleet Off to Enseriada Under brtght, sunny skies and light southwesterly .winds, a fleet of catamarans led 539 sailing yachts off Newport H8rJ>pr at the stroke of noon today in the start of the 23rd annual NeWport.. . Ensenada yacht race. · The anticipated field of 565 was cut ~o 539 at the startina et.in as 31 craft dropped ·out. . Boats started streaming out of the jetty at.10:30 a.m. heading for the dual starting lines off the Balboa Pier. The·cats went ·off at n90n sharp wl~h three other divisions followi,ng at 10 •minute inter- vals. The fil-st boats will start arriving· in Ensenada, 125 nautical miles 8\Vay early on Friday. · . The complete.list e'ntries (including ~e dropoUts) wui be1fo~ on Page 8 of today's DAILY PILOT. '. . · his acU~ ~ay bdor, ,~pef¥ , '+r-7'.,,.-.,...~--..,;....__.,,......,.,...._.,..._.,.... __ ..,._ cOuri. 3tidf1'1,~ Ri&.liis ll"beUlf •1 ' 1~ • --,,,...""'""_,, ·r:-~~tt~~-N .. ,~~, ct""""'··~·~ ·1 · Sail'. <>I. Rohm, Miss Crownover, and • pr.. ' e n·P J. ..... s .::;,O 0 or cesslori ol go.go ·i:fi1QCCr1 ~ topJtu· and • 1 clac -it uncoiisliti.ilional, and null. · P01it"e Chief Rogt r Neth revoked the ' I r I -Miss Kopechne did not ask her rf)C)m· mate at the motel for the key to their room before leaving the party. -The ferry that crossed !ron1 Chap· paquldPick Island to Edgartown stoJ)ped at midnight, and no special arrangements for a later crossing had beell nu1de. She suffered a collaj>sed lung i1 the eafly afternoon hour attack. AJ_bert Scuterl, 53, of 185 Co'sta M~ St., Coit& Mesa, was arrested and booked for lnvestigaUon of assault with intent lo commit murder after the altercation. Mrs. Kerby, or 501 Orangelhotpe Ave., f,nabeim, collapsed into a chair and Lee.said Scuteri fell upon her again. Lee said he grabbed Scuteri from llehind and dragged him ·away from the blee<ling head housekeeper, allowing her to get out of the riowdecl quarters. bar's entertainment permit 1 month ago R t F w · Id T • and owners are attacking the city's e urns rom or np ~~::,i;;;~ti;:~.lring dance permits " . . · j Detective Lieutenant Hal Fischer said Scuteri was cooperative and remorseful after the incident, apparently stemming from an argument over l\1rs. Kerby siding with his ex-wife in a court case. Investigators piecing together what.oc- currttf in the storeroom at the Bayview Convalescent Hospi,taJ said Mrs. Kerby "He stabbed me;'' she mumbled, stag- gering toward help. A group of elderly ladies sent; "How Great Thou A·rt,'' in the hospita! lounge as nurses admlnlstered first aid to the badly wounded woman. "Scuteri was sitting in the storeroom sa ying: ·rm sprry. I'm sorry,' " the janitor explained. B<r;le said "I infer a reasonable and probable explanation of the totality of the above facts is that Kennedy and Kopeehne did not intend lo return to Edgartown at that lime ; that Kennedy did not intend to drive to the ferry slip and his turn onto Dike Road was intentional. Having reached this con. clusien, the questio11. then arises 39 to whether tQere was anything crjminal in his operation of the motor vehicle ..• "I therefore find there is probable cause to believe that Edward M. Kennedy operated his motor vehicle negligently nn a way or in a place to which the public have a right o( access and that such operation appears to have con· tribuied to the death of 1'.1ary Jo Kopechnc. ·• Kennedy, in a statement issued through his Washington office, said "At the in· (See KOPECHNE, Page 2} SA Fish Cance1· Hearings Hear Expert Testimonies Club Judo Class Needs Teacher Tall:e this press release however you care to. '"Jbe Boys' Club of the Harbor Area .Judo Class, which was formed hi 1966 and bas a total of 20 active members. is in need of a qualified Instructor. ·•0ur former instructor, Larr y Castorena. is no longer able lo handle the class." Intert!sted parties may contact Larry Darnell. at 642-8372, according to Boys Club officials. Experts began testimony this morning in Santa Ana at an emergency meeUng of the House Subcommittee on Fisheries and Oceanography on the evid~nce of cancer and other abnormalities in fish caught of'f the Orange Coast near the mouth o( the Santa Ana River. In opening the session, l(ep. Richard T, Hanna ([).Westminster) said, "we a.s a nation cannot afford to remain ignorant of the relatlbnship between :ater pollution, fish disease and the effect on hi.I.mans of eating diseased or infC<"ted fish. "There are those who say that since no clear and convincing link between fish illness and human illness has been proven il is folly to pursue the Issue . I disagree. Human health is at slake. "I am appalled at the acknowledged dearth o~ information available and -~ Mldlffl A, ltltl 1"1!tll MR . GARlllALDI NOT THE ONLY FISH IN THE SEA (P. 17), ' . , research being done on the effect fi9:1 dise,.se may have on human health. Answers must be found as soon as po6sible to remove this potential threat." Ha'nna's alarm was backed vigorously by the first witness, Dr. Bruce Halstead of the World Life Research Inatitute tn Colton. •• • He told .. of a "dramaUc~,. classiCAI ex· ample" of more than 100 people sub- jected to fish poisoning in 1951 at Minamata, Japan. "Ovtr one-third of these peOple died and of the balance half suffered disablln&: sictrnesses. .. I was called an alarmist at the time when I suggested the possibility of the same thing happening in thf. U.S. "Admittedly no one can say that dlsea541s from eating fish are lhe direct cause of huma'n caocer but researchers believe it ls possible. It Is a valid question which demands an answer." The hearing w~:to conUnue throughout the day in the supe,rvisors meeting room in Santa Ana with~ more Ulan a doten ~ witrie\:ses scheduled to be beard. In the Santa Ana hearinp, oile expert ' Is IC:heduled t6 tesU(y on'fbehalf of the Oranse County Sanitation District~ to indicate his btUef• thf:l'! 11 no solid link bet~een _se)Vag(= ouJ,talls and can-Ctorous nsll. . ..,, 1 .. Jle ,is .CHarlea T. Mltchell, prtsident • 1 •• ~ (Ste f1Sll , Page Zt STOCK . 1UARKET NE~ YORK (AP) -The slock ma rket continued its downward drift this after· noon after an early morr\lng rally fail ed t~ gain auppQrt. 1'fa~in,~wpg <t1low. (Set! quotatiOns, Page ~), , Declines outnumbtred aqvances by ' Rm&ll mil' gin. Earlier, dval1Cts had' beell- ahcad by almost four to one • Court decisions have left the city with th .. slipulation alai1e as a control over topless danc1ng . It has never been con- clusively tested before a judge. Moore asked for Wed~sday. but was d~nied a preliminary injunction and tem· (See TOPLF.S.S, Page !) Cyclisi Spilled In Mesa Crash With School Bus A n1otorcycle collided with a school bus turning lefl into a Costa Mesa in- termediate school campus Wednesday, spilling the rider and his passenger to the pavement Raymond Amburgey , 21. of 83~ Victoria St.. wa s treated at Costa Mesa Memorial 11ospilal for cuts, bruises and a fractured big toe. but his passenger was not in· jured. The California Highway Patrol, which handles all accidents involving school buses, said the passenger's name ~was not available. Investigators said Amburgey's big machine co111ded with a bus driven by Newport-Mesa Unified School District employe Neal W. Stewart, 24, about 5:30 p.m. in the 600 block or Hamilton Street. 51.ewart was turning the empty bus left inlo Everett Rea Intermediate School ~ when the crash occurred. A NcwpGrt Beach fan1Jly ifeeted a .sailor home from the sea today, rive years and pertiaps Qlree · ll!etimes - by the average man:s &tandards -after he set out to conquer the oceans or eitrth. Robia L. Graham, 21, maneuvered his 33·(oot sloop Return of the Dove to a berth al Long Beach Marina, after proving he could do what they sald couldn't be done by a boy. He was 16 when he began his odyssey, The youngest man ever ·lo sail alone around the world ·was greeted with. a royal ·welcome as the battered sailboat tacktd to its destination beside the Cap- tain·s Inn. near Seal Beach. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Graham. of 413 St. Andrew's Road. Ne1vport Beach , watched along with his expectant wire Patti, 22. as the weary sallor arrived. He and his wife each set out around the world -in different ways -to find adventure, only to find each other In South Africa . They were married in Australia. Graham, who first conceived of his monumental voyage while the family lived ln Hawaii, waa perhaps too tired to enjoy the gala crowd· and spouting fireboats herakilng his return. "It's been a long five years," said his mother, waiting under a bright' sun. "He's bone-tired ," said his .faUter·in- Jaw , Al Ratteree, of Torrance. The Gfahams and Ratter'*-! greeted the young tailor aboard their own sloop. Badham's Freeway Plan B'lasted in Huntington . By ALAN DIRKIN tington Beach) a!IO grttled Badham's Of nM 01Ur ,,_ It.ff pt'OpolaJ with Sbpticl1in. ' A street sign marked "No Way" In :•:t would e,.t.UM tr~endous surface cl~af !altering. wouJ4 typjfy reactl.on ,in street problems ln HunUnaton Beach,., Hunllngtqn Beach ~ay.to A&sem~Jyman Burke said. · ·· 1 ••• • R\lben ~am'a propoul to . re-route COoll•responded 'wlth ... lttwOuld choke' ·P~lfic Coast Freewiy. . · 1 , up lhetolhe'r freeways'.!'i • : , ,"ll "''O\lld .b& 11ice if we dldnlt have Under Bedham ·a plan tht Paclnc Coast to have the fr er-way down by the ~st Freewa'y •woukll be dtJe"d , east oi the bvt. lt,.1 lherl! because it's nece&sarj"" proposed Roote'39 tn ~lunlington Beach. Clly fi:ngincCr WIUlam Hartge ~rh· RooUl'':ll Is 'Jllanned 'lO'be 8n eight-lane mtl'ilcd. .__ -lree"''IY running nonh-IOUUt ·half a mile He V.·as dlscuSsing a plan put forwa'rd to 'the ~aat of ·ac&ch Bo\llevard. roughly by Baclham (R-Ntwport Beach) to route along Newland Street. the Coast Freeway around 'New,eort and B'adham~I prOpose\ 'would mean that its C9rona de! Mar Communlly! To do instead of the·Coa1l Free.,,., traffic run- ·..., wWkl mean changing ,fl'ti!W.lf pat.-• nllisr9outh from M oma Avenue down to ternsiln c~~fll Hu.~nc:ion.Beach; • ., the coast and tttrouah Newport it be sent > Cit)l \tr1llt<. ens•D~ .P~yl, Coo~,and > up. !ho -· M"l'rlew11 Ind hooked up Assemblyman Robert Burke (ft.Hun-' !Ste FllEllWAY, Pop II ~------~-----.:;. ____ _,;;.;,._c':,..'-'--..... -----_._ • lhe Jovenclta, which aet sa.11 at down tG escort the Return of the Dov.t to its nesting place. f ' Graham, who set sail July •: 1911. went through four cats a& compiillons and '11vO 1allboat9 !n the 33,IXJG.mlle adventure, in which death wu bur at. times. · His initial boat, t.he 24-foot· Dove, Jim~ iiito St. ThomaS, ·uie ·v I r 11 n Islands, ,badly leaking ahd tw4ce dismasted by roul weath"!.-, to be_replaced by the larger craft. 1 He tadioed t.he U.S. Coast Guard hnd- qu8rterS at · Long ·Beach Wedntlda.y afternoon that he was inbound -from the world -and 20 miles south of San Clemente, boat and spirit& fn great shape. Navigators at the 11th Coast Guaf-d District headquarters in Long Beach plot. led his position later at five mlles north of Pyramid Head, the Island's southern tip. During Utt long lonely voyage In which his ports of call included Honolulu, Samoa, Tonga, Fiji, the New Hebrlde!, Cocos Island in the Indian Ocean, ind many more, he e.iperieoced danger.fre- quently. Perhaps the worst was • 1tonn off Durbaa, South Africa. ''He was really worried," said his :ather, "the waves broke the port light and flooded the h\!ldef. Things were fly- ini aJI over Uie boat. He just prayed ••• " just prayed ... " · The journey reminiscent of renowned Sir Francis Chioester's transoceanic soki voyages came near disaster off the lreacherous Cape of Gqod Hope too . Orange c .ou& WeaCler Sunshine is the order of ·the da1 lor Friday, with, temperatures in the shlmmerJnc 10•1, atona tho coast and up to'• siulln& 80 .de- grees further inland. INSIDE ToD..\Y. . J The "coble COf' named dnfN" 'roUed up' lb oJS0.000 po~oJ/ fM tlit pf~l who· loii more than her lied rt In Son 'f'rcincilco. Set . Page 4. C•llttrnlf • .(~K•lftt VJ • I C9'nl"" *"41 :Ctr11k• n CNu-• n OHll11 Htlk" l• r.im1.i "*" 4 ll'lltft•l-..t '*''' ,1~1nc1 »~ "',..."' ti AM ~tlMltn 1) --_ _,___ - I. I ' 11 I ' ' ' ' ' I ... , ' • -< • ! Wll!NING TEAM -Members of Oran~• Coast Col· ltge speech iea!ll took time out from tlielr P,reP,ara· ttons for next .wee1i:1s national competition 'to Pose for thls portrait. Team members include (standing from left) Rita Wakely, Debby Brucber, Cathy Bar· , . DAILY Pll.OT Pllm W , ...... ~II 11ett arid Don1 Sizem·ore. On tractor (from left) are Jean illan):enshlp, Nick Caterino, Lyal Heririg, Pleree Lucas, Eric Samuelson, Dorothy Mac/dillan and Mike Mlklaus. · · · • OCt Debaters 'scra111hle ., Top U.S. Team to Defend Ranking in ·Nationals \ . . By STEVE l!flTCllE!L . OI "'t .filellf' "jiff '19f1 Compel!Uoa u 1he name of the 1ame 1..-~ COut College'• f<ftnald team. 'l1le lpooch team, •rated tops In the nation. wJU attempt to maintain its na-· llonal' rankinlJ al the National P'oioMle· Tournament May 4 through May 9 at the UnivtnilY ol Michigan. The · team 1 bu an impressive lilt or v.lctoriel for the 1•70 season, 'tnduc:llng nh neepstakes trophies. M• llorbar& Burgeaa, direelOr ·of the . team and an. assistant. professor of .,eedl at OCC says, "Tbe enthuiium of· the lea!n meniben at this atagi ol the game ls lreme!idous. My ofll"" · ha bee(l a flurry of activity as the ~-)_..,,_ch fl>HCll materta.f l11fpnct1Coe for 'tlit'naUorials." EJC;h 5lud!Gt llpeildl al ltut. 15 !!our• a week, outaide al cilu, in Jt'tPllf'liloo for tho ..... pijJnllllpsi •"11111 _. •• lncludt 'time IJl)Ont. ly tho tum in' fund- n!sing prvjecls to ....i occ to the nalionall," txpllllltd Miis Burgw.' · other collea:es and individual speakers, according to Miu B:uraeu. She noted that the compeUUon can a:et quite rua:· ged, referring to a recent tournament where team debator Lyal Henog lost seven_pounds d\ain1 the two-day verbal boul The team's 300 tndlvtdual hoW's or speech compeUUon should make them a fC!fTl\idable opponent in the n1tlOn11l11 next' -k. The nine sweepstake wlns acquirtd lhi.s ~BOO by the team are lndlcat.ive of the drive of its members and their will to' Win. The reconi : • -In Novembef the team won Its first l!Weepslllkes trophy at the Rlvenlde City CoUegeJunior College In v it at Ion 1 I am...;nt IWIJvo,ln4JWdual Uopbles and. 2% certlllclta of merit. '.' • 'lbat mne month the team competed foe Ille flnl ti!!'< ln ,lbe jl'eol~·Stateo' Cbliriplonalifu. '11111111 70 eolltpa •nd u/il~'"'tlell' ·_: edgli\i oui Lelils and Clarke Unlvenll)I and the Unlv•t•lty or Arizona for the first pl a c e sweepstakes. -In December OCC won firft place sweepstakes at the Pacific SOuthwest' Collegiate Forensic A.!lsoolaHon · Cham- pionships. -J~uary found the team at the Western State! Junior College Rea:lonal where the team won six trophles and 18 cerUflcates of merit. ·· ' · ......jn February the team competed In the Long Beach State Collep National JnvttaUonal Tournament and took flr.!lt plaoo! ,.. .. pstakea In the junior division. -March competition provided perhaps the most Impressive win for the OCC team at the Spring Riverskle. lnvltational Junior College Toum&ment Whett CoUt defeated Odeaa Colloge. , the ,national championalllp lam 01'11189. '· -Following the Odessa up&<!t, OCC's speallera . cajned. ,pwmenlurn and took three ~re , c!lfmplonahl~ neem.Jie vlctorles In J)repiratJon' tOr ·the niitlOiial championship. competWon In Mlchiran. Fre111 Page 1 FREEWAY PROPOSAL • • • - · Nude :.Danoo n: ..... n~aD 's;. .Post ~·---~-· . . . ' " • > Ii,. lllOHAlll! P. NALL lmpatlanl 111tew111~1Qfflce. • • ;. 1 • !" * ..w !'*"' '"" . . .. • ''l think the Mmte'i rejKllon '"·ot !l'~CllAMEHTO -State ~ Attred -· Mllciltll'I aJlllQbllme!lt wlll ...,.. •GoY. E. Aliulst (0.:S.. JOft), today 'VO"'.ed Reapo I groat doaJ. of future.' em- to U7 Md black: &be' a~ntmlnt el. Jwruamnt." , ,. , • ,...... illay 'JI. MJfchell Jo 1ha '.ROplbUOla -'Ila.. lilted ,11111 Slalt_ F_' llMIC aDOOinlld Ibo'~• "I ' wW Mr. MJlcb<ij'1 Ip-MJ!Pell' II .. Ille &liq ur1k1C cl llu wJntm:.'t • Ibo'.. ~Jt. ~· 119l 'Rlllsty._'.!14te "'Jllrin_,..,I af·~ be<aUSt of• his naelloaary pilllilca but Jnairuc&ii; " becauat of his dismal ' ,_', :,! MltcillU, If, 11.8 .• Alta ~a Rood, pertormanco on the, Oranp ·C..,Oy . a retired food -· 11111 f!Nodil ld- sehool boanl," uld Alqulll. , visel', WU not lnllibJe locllJo , lo·• And al\JIOUP 'Alqu!&I wwld Only need meat oo the Alqodal ~ ·• it v0tes~ to aceomPUlb the ;task. his ., • • .. chined of --AoubUul. • It takes a twl>lblrdl vote, fl.,.natorl, l'ro•'' p.,_ 1 o1 tho . IO-ii!embor Smite .. coonrm CllN tbe ,.-. apPoln1m111t. KOPE .E · It bu been rare 'la the . put , for ·. ' · · . • •· ~. the slinall to turn down 1.iu~torJal , .. . · , •Pl'Olntment or evlll far --lo , q ... l. MrullllUll)"-All~ spend 1s much time ;wttb tJt' as they ·1 ~ of me. ~ MY ~'view, have a~eacly put In on Mltcllell , !lie ~ dd ulllmale ,llndlng · o1 Nonnally the senatt ~·taken ·II)• at-" lhe;J:~ 1 J'ePGl'I. are· not.~ '~ tltude It ii a gubernatorial' prero1aUve . I ~ them1~: -. J· • . and problem. . • . ~ ' .. 1 • ' &.. ~ t(>Ahl• ~t are DO'ft'. · Alqul1t, who 18 a candidate· !or Jldly.,Jll!bil!:, ,)>efadded,( •!iaicJ evenli!al lieutenant governor, said of Mitchell,' Judlftl'll """'~ noll wl\ere "Th• unrefuled evidence-sl\Ow• he abnPly • II ~p: ll'1lr .1111"WU I plln no further doH not ·meet the quaJllliations for lhfl·· ,llate!Mm !Ill. tiili trqle mal!Or .• Both ,..,, lamWes Mve &Uflered • ...,. rrom • publtc u~ . .i IJIOC1l]athiao:'" • I In his .~ ~le did '11111 bring · up-the ·~ QI ' w~y KenoidJ .wljted "-;run, 'llcilln before l<JIOI 11111 the acddbt.to Edsll'linm poHCiO. • Coast Fiee~~y Fighters Sia~~ Newport Meeting !MU. H. Leland, the foreman of the Dulcea County' Granci Jury, which on · "Alril 7 ipll6d 1· wblrlwlJid ,probe of the accldeBI witllout returning ao Jn. dlctmen~ Aid ,tliete wu a "poealbillty" ol .....-, the jury aJthoucb he Udn't U~jt yet.'1 Tiie' Harbor Area 1"rteway Fighters • wUl l!OJd ,a meeting al 7,30 o'clock to- nigllt 'Jn the Newport Harbor High School auditorium. The t,100-seat auditorium was ~ented because the freeway fighters expect a large crowd after their "Block the Free- way" circular was distributed to 24.000 households this week. The Freeway Fighters want to stop Pacific Coa.!lt Freeway [rom coming through Newport Beach and destroying the marine • oriented environment of the city. They have launched a petition effort and have thousands of signatures. "We won't know how many until to- nicht. They have been coming in thrte- or four different places," said Marshall Duffield, Freeway Fighters acting chair ... man. 1 • , , Duffield slld petitloila will be clrdll•· ted another two or three w~. He aid city traffic engineer Robert, Jaffe, wtU dHcrtbe the Pacific Coa!I Freeway tout& 11 it: M 'pree'enO;\en. gineered. There alto will b8 tri\apr:"bd aerial photographs showing the idoplid Coast Freewiy route. , Leland wtll have to make up Jda mind by May Jl when a new grand jury is selected, although theoretically 110thing would Rana bl the Way· .of the new jury.tUJni Up 'thO ..... Law Day Set By Mesa Mayor Costa Mesa Mayor Rebert M. Wilson has iasued his flnt formal proclamation, doolpatlng Jl'riday aa Law Day USA, in tribute to tbe rules on which American IOclety is run. ·ffe · Joined · irJU>, at-Bradley K. Schwan, .Cool& J4aa chairman for the Orange County Bar Ai"'Cla~Oll, Jn pro. ~~aJminl the oa!Jonwlde ~fl!CO Jo. lly. ~. ,._ • ' " "Law -miµae tC1~ J~.~-Is ·.the theme of thl!I year's observance Md May. or W1"'1l calla upqn all C/llRns, achqola, church" and other qincles to join llL . Case Cut Against 11· ~ Eleven d"1cl.P&. cirll Wednesday won ditmlAel of Indecent o:posare cbar1ts ftled• after pollco said ttlOy pet l•nned., nude In two orafti!l County bars. · Santa Ana · Mu'niclpal' Coiirt Judie" Robert Ricklea lotiecl'out lbO complalals against the u 1ii1.s. He al&O dlamwe.i' related charges against three male employb ol the taverm. • 'the' min . had biea cha/Jed wfll In-" citm.1 the girls to break CJl>scfnlt1. lit.atutes. I", J"41e Ricilea· rul'!!J that c..ie. , ... ,... Ing .....Ued -11anc1n1 cannllt be ~~ lo a.bier Jraf performtr. · • It . was indicated that bis ruUnc was 4 ~r~w:n . from ~ 'imilar "Jling recenUy.; 1saued by · ah Orange County Super!Or Cjlnrt '.appOllate panel : In which Judgaa , l!eij)Ort ,HeJ:laJllls and WllU&m Murray . outwted . Judae ftl,ymond TbomPl(l1 Jn 1 c.hallenging the hitherto a cc 1 p t e d obSc!nity lnterprtticloo. · .All t~e tltaUonS dbmiS.!led were Issued 1 by , OranJe Co_unty sheritrs offiCera In the Tu>caii Room; Tuillli and the Sarong Bar; Santa ·An1. All 14 defendant. were repr.e.!lented by Gardena attorney Berrien·~ Moore. l'rom Pege I TOPLESS ... p..rary restraining ocder · qllnlt Ollef· Nt<h .-and his men, pending !ht May · II bearing before JU<liJe Robert . C." Corfman;· Moore filed his ·action lmmedlalely• afttr succenlully argutog for dlsmlllal o[ indecent · e1Po1Ufe charges. apinst,.. male . managers . .and a. group of .,.., tertalners who allegedly .d1netd topletl and tiottomless in Tu$tin and Santa Ana. "Qur action · will mean tbe end of\ Costa -Mesa's ordinance &1 .. 11," Moore: predicted Wed-ay. , • "It· wu never cOn!llltutlonal and en-: fOr.ceable and I think ·Judge Corfman ~ will quickly 8CCiOpl my argumen~" he added. · . Moore . oDce represented Har ry. 1.1asselli, owner of Baby Doll's, another c.oeta Mesa topless tavern embroiled in a lengthy topleu contr:oveny reachin1 . back three year1. Bal>y Doll'•. was Ibo . laqet of. the city's. entertainment ordinuCe a n.d scores ci cM.iUons wfre iatNid. befON liluyiclol Jl!<\llll!l!ll 1.,.c..i~.cloopi'!, The· law was de9lined .t tliit....time for,' '<Clnii!ltutiooallty hwtnl tii Ibo · Fcurth 'D!Jtrlct Court ol Appeals, ·bUI . l>9 rulln,: wu made liooe the tavern cl<Med.. '1bl fonnsic team bu ralled nearly $3,.,. of Ille fund~ needed to BeJl<I, the entire team to the Mlchlagn contest. Another $1,000 is needed, at:cording to lb• lpeech director. What motivates members of the team to spend so muc:h time and effort on a project that briq;s neither profit or co0..e unlll? to the San D!ego Freeway and then the Corona deJ Mar Fretway, thus bypass- ing the Harbor Area. .. B ... IG ... B.E~D, -. 0--;0~ ·a·'. M-,·-.s··i~:t .. L~E""""".i- that the idea would overburdeq purf1ce ~ H, MOit meinbtn of the team believe ~ improvement of communication l! the primary reason for partlcipaUng on the tum. "Most of tbe bu.sineu ·. world today cmnot communicate effecUvely," says Ltal Heru>g, team debator. ''Com· murucaUon Is vitally important - eopeclally in today'& complex world." JltnOI la prma>Uy carrying 16 unlll . at1 00C and wwks full.time at a motel in,Coola Mesa. ~ team debater, Mike MiklaU!, w4s drawn to the speech team because of! his inteNlll In Jaw. "Speaking and communk:ltinl are the most impartant . ••ti to-the legal profession," he says. ' n. youna debator is J)ft!ently working 2$1hours a week at a Huntington Beach dejlorlmeot J:'J In add!Uon to carrying JI !unill al . Another benefit of the speech team h : the excitement of competing with ' DAILY PILOT J •clt R. CYrl1y VIit ~ allll 0-11 MI Moftl' 1'•111111 ic •• .,11 ldlW n111111 A. M1rplril"1 ""-lo-. l:~Mr c .... M.,. Offic1 l JO Wlat l1y Str11t t M1llr11t AJJr111: P.0 .1111560, t26?6 ............. • • M1wp1rl ••kll1 m l W.:.. la1M1 1e1,r11v .. 1111 1...-tMCti: m ,..,..., ,.,,._ H.,.,tlfllMll •-'11 11'71 .. di ll:ivlev••d ""' cie-111i •• ...,.., •• '''"..,. ""t While Badham aay1 the Idea to 11klrt Corona del Mar is his, State Sen. John Schmitz (R-TusUn) concurs and says the legl.!llaton will present similar bllls in both M.l.!lfs of the Legislature. From Sacramento, Burke said that he understood Bldham'a main concern is for the freeway to bypau the Harbor Area and that how that could be done was .!lecondary. streets. 1 .... , .' "I don 't know what It ~d 1o to Adams Avenue, Hamiltou Avtrnie.,.. and Coast HighwaJ tf.arfic ioto eo·sta. Mesa arid Newport Beach. The bridges there are overloaded now at weekends." From Pege 1 FISH ... ''My first feeling 11 that attempts have been made over and over by legislators to change decisions of the or Marine Biological Consultant!, Inc., state Highway Com tn I 11 i on by of 407 E. Bay St., Costa Mesa. eliminating or changlna: freeway routes, In prepared. testimony to the com· but uni.ii QOw lhe Leg!slature has s~ped mrttee, Mitchell declared, "The oo- all efforts or thia kind because of the c U·r r f: n ce or fishes . with anomaJCNS precedent It would set. From then on growth! or· di sease ln areaa of wl.Rte every freeway route decision would be discharge (both indu.strial and domett.lc) made in the Legislature." is by po mew ,a r~nt event. Such The Assemblyman went on, "If he's fi.ihes have been collected as early 11 successful, it would be a real big surprise 1922 In San Francisco. Bay. The California to me. It would be a precedent-sftting Department or fish and game has move that would be ml&htYCl!ttcult documented .. the problem 1ince 1956 in to accompU11h. the Los Angeles area. Asked whether he felt there was a. "Similar reports can alao be found need for the Pacific Coa.st Freeway for British Columbia, Washington, LOPg in HUDt.ington Beach and Newport Beach, Beach and San ·Diego. The ex.act etiology Burke· nplled, "Oace I ljllealtoned tho of !hue abnormal growlllJ and letlon.s real need for tt. but I don 't.have much on •fiabes in these art"'~ rem_.in. a doubt about it now. You can go down myatery despite the work ·of many in- any day and see the need. And that's vestlpior1. ltistolo1lcal studies have In-- not juat local traffic there, it't throu1h dicated these papiUoma are not mal.lg· tra£fic." nant but probabl)' caused by mectwiical. De lawmak~r considered the freeway chemical or lnlectious.lrrlt.Uoo. . plans too far a1on1 to mile a chanfe. 11The occurrence ol these fishes ii "My reaction is that If he Is success ul not limited to areas near domestic In eliminating the freeway at Beach discharges; fl.!lhes exposed to 3 to 10 Boulevard and Adam! Avenue on south, ~nt dilptions ot water from Do~ '! see ·no rtaiion· for Ule Goast Freeway guea Chann.el ln 1.oa Angeles Harbor from that point north . deve!Opea lesions. within 'lJ days and "It would cause tremendous surface many died even after removal to clear street problems," Burke continued. "You water. would have Route 39 and \,he Coast "Jn the cowse of our P{'esent bio10gjcal Freeway both durriptng bel:chgoen at 1 !llrvey we ila,ve made 2\1tparate belthlc that point. It would. makt no aenae." trawls (ln August and November, 118t City Engineer Hartge pointed out that and February 1970) within I mJles o[ state Division of Highway! .!ltu dle.!I would th-pre$Cnt Orange County Ocean OuUall . determ.lne whether Badham'• rerouting 1 Almost 8,000 flJhN hlvfi &e.n ca,ptured would work. "I think It's neceu1ey to representing 4J spec.Jes. have a freeway in tome places along "About ooe-balt of these fishts ha-ve ~~~~"°""· """ ..fildl • ~ .,.. the coast." been ca~urtd-wtthln · 100 ~· of :ttte .._ 1t _.WIH 11111nw ·~ Sto>-Traffic engineer COok said : outfall. Ap--:a-atelv 5 !:tent ci tbe9e r• Ill ...,. ... llfltlM!s ter l....,.. •Mdo. .. II ·•--•-t "~ II Id l"•~u ' ........, .. ~ c-1• Mto-. """''""i... ·~ o me ~ wou mean fis.'°' exhlbite4 etthtr papl loma or 'les:lons .·=~=-~!:..""c..',':" .. ::~..:; pufUni all the traffic on Route 31 •nd on the nn,,. All were white cro1ters, ~' IJll"Mflilt ..-•re tt nn .,,., the San Olq:o frweway1 which alrudy a fish not eenerally used for con· ,:::-..,::,-c..":.W:~~ .,.. DI .., have heavy proJtcted tratfJc volumes &Umpllon. Of this total 1pproxim1tely of their own. 16 indlvldua'· •·• p1pllloma. -...... ,r T1hft111 11141 '4J·•:tl1 "Y 1.-I'·• I of•'--io l"9U '""' \IVl' ' a.NW A• ... 11st111; MZ·l 611 . .. DU can ta-a m11. ou .... iyatem 90le have been captured with papllloma, .and all you accomplllh 11 to overload bo~• collected some distance from the ~ ""' or.,.. ,._., "'*11"''"' the l)'tlem,,. lt would chDke "" the ot.htt outfall. ~ ,.. ,..... 1teri... Hl<Aft•f..,.. -1:r,-~'~-;. ~~~11,w: freeway5 . "Tht preeent survey, under way !lnct ffnlill• • "'"""' twr1er. Cook also pointed out that the 1tate_.,.....-1'ugusl 1969 will not only supply It....-.. ,...,... 11111111 it Hl'WP'frt ••10t has 1cqulted rights of way alone the background dit1 for lhe outran under ,,,, c..11 ..-. •. ca11t1n1i., iiM<"-'1111 w beae:hlront and tower Beacll Boultvafd COTlfllructlon but wlll also monitor µ,r1tlr UM -""YI " mtll at,M '"""111111 f the f ~lttm Mf!MJ-. ., .... flltllt111,..__ ••• or. ~"IJ'· changes In the. .arta of the .. e.xia:UnJ ~----:.:..,;;.__;._;..._..;i The li'llfoc enginffr agreed with Burki ouUlll after ila operaUon has CiOased." ------~----·-----.... ···-. :. .. -·--' .., " Thi',.,... it.ft.rt ..... you'd •XJl'l tt ct1t mueh, mudrmOrlt ,Save on elepnt triple dresser bedtooms by ~noirHouse S_EI OUll. l'ULL '411 AD IN l'AMILY WllKLY -MAY 2 INTUIOft DESIG EkS ·~- ' • ' I -- •• , ... ;yJ It II y . a , d d n ' • .. D. Y' d it· ... I >: "' • ,. r - l I• • j • •• • t 1 , .. .. • l ..... .,..,~.,·-=--~..,,..--.:::---:::;'~:-;-:,-:-..-,;-:=--~ ...... ~--~· .... -o:",!!:'!"""'"'l': .... -~~ .... ~1'1'~1"1"~.,,..,,"'""""'ilti~~~~'!!;g:;~~~~-~-~~~~~~1¥'~.,:~~ ' • • VOL. 63 , NO. 103, 3 SECTION S, 44 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. t ... ,.., 7' - 'Solon Still Opposes M~tchell; Chanc:es Slful. By RICHARD P. NALL Of IM D911'1' l"llff Shit SACRAMENTO -State Senator Alfred E. Alqulst (D-San Jose), today vowed ·lo try and block the appointment of South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell to the State Board of Education. "I will opJ>06C Mr. MitchelJ's ap- palntment on the Senate floor, not because of his reactionary politics but because of his dismal recGrd of performance on the Orange County school board," said Alqui!t. And altbough Alquilt would onJy need 14 votes to accomplish the task, his chances of suceess seemed doubtful. It takes a two-thlrds vote, 27 senators, of the 40-member Senate ltl confirm the governor's appointment It has been rare in the past for the senate to turn down a gubernatorial appointment or even for senators to spend as much time with il as they have alr~ady put in on Mitchell. Normally the senate has taken lhe at- titude it la a tubernatorial prerogaUve and problem. Alqulst, who is 1 a candidate • lot lieutenant governor, said of Mitchell, "The unrefuted evidence shows be simply does not meet the qualifications for this important statewide office. "I think the Senate's re!~tion of Mltchtll'S appointment will save Gov. Reatan a" great deal of future em~ barrassment." • Republican .sources have stated ·~•t Reaaan appointed lhe arclH.'onserv1Uve Mitchell aJ tbe strong urgtna r Max Rafferty, state superintendent o public instruction. Mitchell, sa, 11 s . Alta Mlra Road, a retired food broker and financial ad· viser, was not available today to c:om- ment on the Alqul.st statements. Mitchell Wednesday won a 4 to • t endprs11ment. by the powerful Senate Rules Committee which can take tho UIDID~ ver ' With (].S. Help Viets Hit Deep Into Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -Four tank-led South Vietnamese task forces estimated at 9.000 men dr ove deep into Cambodia today with U.S.' air support, and their commander announced they would re· main "for many days" to trap and destroy thousands of Communist troops in thoir onetime sanctuary. The nulln · thrullf "along· Highway t leading from Saigon to Phnom Penh overran the Cambodian towns of Chipou and Prasault, 25 miles inside Cambodia, and was pushing westward towards Cam·. bod Ian ·troops based at Svay Rieng, 40 miles Inside Cambodia and 70 air miles from Phnom Penh . Three task forces eslim&ted at 2,500 each drove Into Cambodia.in the Parrot's Beak sector whlch juts inte South Viet· nam to within 35 miles · of Saigon . A fourth task force of 1,500 pushed across the border from the Mekong Delta tow,n of Kieng Tuong to try to cut off 15,0Cll Viet Cong in the area. So far the South Vietnamese report killing 445 Viet Cong and North Viet- namese troops and capturing vast _sup- plies qf equipment at a loss of 32 killed and 112 wounded, 55 of the wounded 1trafed by mistake by U.S: helicopter gunships . Two U.S. advisers were reported wounded. Although a Cambodian spokesman in Phnom Penh said his government could not approve the allied operation, since tt violated Cambodian neutrality, front dispatches said the opera~ion was coord inated with the Cambod ian army to the extent a dozen Cambodians linked up with t:,e advancing Vietnamese forces as guides. . The first officially acknowledged dnve Into Cambodia by South Vietnamese troops had the official purpose of de stroy· ing Viet Cong and North Vie tnamese base camps near the border. But _as the Communists fled from the allies _ some in commandeered cars -the scope of the action was extended. Lt Gen. Do Cao Tri said he was exte~ding the operation because: "We ~·ill need many days to search the area thoroughly. We will try to control the area. to trap them inside and destroy them ." He said three brigades of South Viet· namese troops were involved in the push along Highway I. Newly structured South Orange Coast • Weather Sinshine Is the °')fder of the day for Friday. with temperatures in the shimmering 70'& along the coast and up to a sizzling 80 de- grees further inland. ' INSIDE TODAY The "cable cat 11amed desire",. Tolled tip to o $:50,000 payoff for I.lit girl who lost more tl1a11 !Irr heort ill San rran cisco. See Page 4. c111""i.. • ..... H•11 CllK~IM u, ' Mu"'el 11..-. n c1 .. 1HIM ,..41 Hllltflmf Htw• .. <-•• n °'"'' c_,, " CrwH...,,. n ,,,vi. ...,., n °""' IM!k •' " ·-.... l!•Tltl"i.I ...... • ltldl Mmrliett n.H lll!Mtl•IHNlll •·• Tt!HfliMI n ·-· ... , ...... . .., --" ·-• AMI LIMllf'I u W""""' Nnrl 1)-16 Vietnamese brigades toltlf"about IO per- cent or an American army brigade or 4,500 men, but military sources in Saigon sa id Tri 's forces totaled about 7,500 men. Russell said American advisers were visible along the route, handling radio communications and plotting m a p coordinates. There also were a number of Green Beret men with Cambodi!J.n mei-cenari' lf'Oups wtlt~ ba:re·~n used agalnsr the V1!t c.ong near the Mekong DeJta regloo for years. Ted Kennedy Says Ruling Not Justified BOSTON (UPI) -Judge James A. Boyle, refuting sworn testimony by Edward M. Kennedy, says t h e P.1atsacbusetts senator was taking Mary Jo Kopechne down a road that led only to a secluded beach the night she drown. ed. Ke"\ncdy says he had bee• takJng ~iss Kopechne back to drop her off at her motel. He rejected "the inferences and ultimate finding of the judge 's report" as not "justified." Boyle, in his findings on the ctlebi;ated case, said Kennedy Probably was drlving negligently. He left open the matter of whether criminal charges might be pressed -although further action ap- peared unlikely. ,.1iss Kopechne, 28. a fonner secretary for Sel'I. Robert F. Kennedy, drowned ~·hen Kennedy's auto weot off a bridge at Chappaquiddick Jsl and, Mass., ,the night ot July 18, 1969. The testimony and Boyle's findings at the inquest in Edgartown from Jan. >a were made pu'qliC Wedaesday. KeMedy, in his lestimony, said he was taki~ Miss Kopechne back to her motel room in Edgartown when he made a wrong turn and went 7/IO!hs of a mile down the wrong road -the road that led across a wooden bridge spanning a tidal pond. Th( auto, with Kennedy at the wheel, went off the bridge and landed upside down in the pond, drowning tj1e g~I. Boyle noted several points thal came out in the testimony to back his feeling Kennedy and Mias Kopechne. did not (S.. KOPECHNE, PO(e I} Runoff Slated At Viejo High A run.off elecUon tod ay for vice. presi· dent of Mission Viejo High School's associated student body \viii round out lhe cast of new student officers. The runoff ls between candidate! Greg Hebets and Ray Delgatto. Neither received a major.Jty in the Wednesday election. Other ntw officers are Donna Conally, president; Pam Davis, .secretary; Jeff Masterson, treasure.r:; Thelma Giddens, aclfvltles coordinator: Steve A!hcraft, publicity chairman ; Sue Schaeffer, pep commissioner ; Hans Duncan, senior representative; Andre Holmes. junior representalive; and Bob Fer i u 1 on, sophomore representative. . .. -~--~---------:.... :..i.:: •• , DAILY PK.Qf •11tf l"MM POSTER PUSHES RALLY, COVERS SHATTERED WINDOW In Oce1n1 idi, A Sign With • ·Du•t Purpose Orange Coast Architect Wages War on Ugliness By-PAMELA HALLAN ot·tM 0.1,., l"lltl S11" Ronald Yeo, "the Ralph Nader or Orz1ge Coast beautlllcation," Wednesday brought his fight against uglineM to ttl~ Capistrano Bay League of Women Voters. Through a series of slides, the aretiltect a1.d conservationist showed the group what they should be noticing and haw to gel rid of what they don't like. "You ha ve an opportunity. here In this area to lea rn from the mistakes other communities have made," said Yeo. "Ten years ago, Garden Grove had an opportunity to learn frorn lhe mistakes Los Angeles made but it didn't.'' He told them he was waging a war against ugliness and asked them to help by looking around the next lime they drive down the street. "A majoMty ot our problems have sprung up around ' ,transportation, said Yeo f\a5hing a pJcture of a freeway on the sc reen. "The automobile has created .storage, mainte.nance"And refueling problems.'' lie then showed 1 aeries of pictures of cluttered. sign.gorged fu.nclional gils Sl!itlons. . "You can.do something about thi11," said the Corona de! Mar man. "The nexl time you pay your credit card bill enclose a letter to the company complain:h1g about the ugliness." He then showed a series of Imaginatively dMigo- STOCK UARKET NEW YORK (AP ) -The stock market continued its downward drift this after· noon after an early morning rally failed to g1ln support Tratilng wa s 1low. (See quotations, Pages 31-33). Oct.lines outnumbered adval1<'eS by a small margin. Earlie r, 1dvance1 had been ahead by almost four to one. • ( ed gas stations with . planters rull of trees, the result or somebody 's beautification acmpalgn. He assured the group that individuals can do something to beautify sur- roundings even ·when it means fighting giant corporations. ;•The war an . utility poles la a ~ood example." he said. "People began re31lz.. in.;: Ulat utility polesa re a blighl on (See BEAlfl'Y. Page. %) Planes Overfly Nixon's Home Private planes are penetrating the air security surrounding Presi- dent Nixon's Western White House . In a· press release, Arvin O. Basni ght, ~!rector of the Federal Aviation Agency's n In e. s t a t e western reP,ion, reported that since notice of the prohibited area, for the President'• safely, 11.·as made public last fall there ha ve been numerous violations. "Sevel"e penalties, I n c l u d l n a suspension of pilot llccnse1, have been and are being assessed against these violators," said Basnight. "We ask the cooperation of all P.ilots flying in the vicinity of the Summer White" Hou11e; to· avoid the prohibited arta and he.Ip Ins ure the President'• protection and safe-ty. ,, The prohibition la in effect at all. times, not just when 'the Presi- ~nt is in ruldence, he stated . The a\rspm security area has a rlldlus of about one n&utical mile. ' , matter to the noor of Ille ""'* llouoe when It chooses, JXlUibly 'nu! Week if the votes, •e nailed down for MltchtJI. Alqulst aides said today !hit" Ille senator has four sure xotea aa:•in.St Mitcllell and another nve Jn the probable area. One of the vain ogalnol Mil<helt Is likely that ol Sen. Stephen P. Teale, CO.West Point), a. member or the rules commiUee and the sole no vote Wed· nesday. Group Vows ToBeReady 'Next Tiine' By JOHN VALTERZA Of tile. 0.1111 Plltl ll•ft "They all call us a violent orgaoiutlon, but we don't go around !praying machine ~ru i:nto people's houses," Paul said, gazing at bull~t holes In the buff stucco house in Oceanside. The youth, wearing bushy sideburns, friziy hair and a button with Che Guevara'• portr~it Jn red and black 1X1li1led QUt shJtlttred windows. a bullet· ChiPm $~Walk, tjiep . _¥0}l'ed1 i''/le'r.e ·a1111W~··1111rt.~i{o'll~~ ~~~:.,~u::~;~~ Tuel}ily when three mtn «Srovt iq. ,fr<mt of the heodquarten ol the Movement fir • ·Democrauc MiUtary (MOM) and OP,ened up with a machine gun. Jibe burst o( a dozen slL11s ripped through the front of the reaidence and one shot hit a Marine before he could hi t the floor. "It hit brother Jesse (Woodward) In the arm, then went Into his chest. The sJi.lg stopped about . an inch from his heart;" Paul explained. Woodward, police said, was a Marine t.!orps deserter. He is recovering after surgery at the U.S. Naval Hospital. Other bullets lodged Into walls and ripped through posters h a n g I n g throuihout the house. On& slug · £\rst went through the back of Eldridge Cleaver's heid in one poster, lhen passed through a poster showing a clenched fist hofHJng a rifle complete ~·ith a slogan about anning onesell by Bobby Seale. then whlu.ed past four inhabitants of the house, fMally to stop in 1 far wall. It hit a poster photo of Che Guevara Jn the left cheek before finally stopping. Leads to the identity of the vigilantes -witnesses said lhey were three in nu1 .• ber -number zero. Oceanside police. who say the case (S.. SHOOTING, Page %} Pottery Shack Ma y Get Pole Sign After All It ap~ars that Roy Childs,' owner of Laguna's colorful J>Qttery Shack; will be able to put up a conforming 1ign on his parking lol without erecting a building to support it. · Seeking to rJplace a large, existing pole sign idefiUfylng the lot with a smaller more artistic carved wood sign, Childs discovered that the new sign ordinance requires signs 1n R-3 zones be attached to buildings. Pointing out that the parking lot was not equipped with a building, Childs applied for 1 variance to permit the pole ~gn. The matter was further complicated when reading of local codes indicated parklng lots in i,.-i·iones could be permit- ted only under condiUonal use permits, which ,alJo take care of signing. ' There Weren't any conditional use permits when he put In the parking lot, CHUds explained. ~ Planners· agreed that rezoning would solve the whole problem, but this seem.eel • unduly complex for such a small nietter and anyway; rezoning probably should await completlbn of the. general p~n. This week, commlasionera le•med the city attorney had ruled out conditional use pennit procedure and Indicated that the variance Ch.Uda origtnaUy reqoested probably woukl do the trk:k. The com· ml!Slon will 11ct on the request at its regular Monday mect!ng. Arter Alqubt lnterr01oled -wllh pe~ of the rules oommiUee, ,.. took,over ond asked Mltdlell to - Ille ,,IuncUoM of Ille Stale Boord ti Educllloo. Mil<bell said il sbould strive Jn elev..., the heft educaUonal sylltem pollible lw younptcrs. -.. · . Mltchdl, who cali. for a return. ID the liaalc pr)!lc!pl" or education, .llld he does not oppose change but· "II a . (Sec MiiceELL, Pop I) i , ·-· Student Leader Denies Charges By Councilman Laguna Beach HJgh School Student Body President Howard Hills this ~eek de~ed Clly Councilman Edward 1.clrr's charge that students had · p&rticlpated in the tax override election camJ)4ign with the encouragement of ~ '~I board. Lorr recently accused the ;board ·of "playing on the emotions o{ the voltri'' by using students to campaign for the tax. School Boar~ President La.tty Taylor specifically denied ~e charge, pointing ?ut that 'Inquiring !ilude'nis had . beep informed !he board could not use them for such activity. In an April 28 letter addrt!Med to Lorr as president ot the Laguna Beach Taxpayers' Association, and today releas- ed to the press; Hills wrote : "As president of the Laguna Beach High School Student Body I im di smayed .about your recent ' r~~ch of our school board. Whlle It Is OOt my intention ' to deny that the vasf 'ma. jority of students and teacher, naturally favored the isaue, it Is completely fallacious to imp}Y that any pnssure was brought to bear ... to enlist student support." Students who dld suppo~ the schools, said •lllls, did so under the protection of the U.S. Con.sutution. Babe Ruth Ball Tryo uts Slated Laguna Beach area boy9 . aged 13 through 15 are invited to particlP1te in ttJ:e annual Babe Ruth League tryout.I scheduled from 9 1.m. to noon 1l the high school baseball field S.lurlfo,y, Moy 2 and again on Saturday, May• 9. Lrague play wilt begin June U., '\We hope for a good turnout," said Mrs. .l e ""Ph Sweany, "ao we can have 11- ; teams. We expect at least enouah boye ror five team5, but ahc would be better." Partlclpanls should la~e 'Jl>elr birth certlllcates, $3 registration ftt ·~ a mitt. U lhey have one, to the fryoul.I. Those eligible are boys who wUI be ti by Aug. I and not more lban 11 by th11.t date. • Further infomiaUon · may be oblalned )Y callln1 Mrs. Swcaey at 49H630. ' i J ' I I I • ' 'No Lang rerm Move' Niiun A·~$ures • ""'8DIOl'llll (111'1) -Tbe wlili. ,Jlola 1111•• ~ key .,.,.. f! ""'!11Joday 11111 President Ntson 1 llot hdend to Involve the United . '>!Itel In a-•ijijjjitemiq(iieisaod operi· tto;t" in aambOia. · lk!t the unalgoed -l!tatement.clrculaled on Capitol Hill said, the President found It .neceua,ry to send advisor• and arms 19~. Cambodia from Vietnam "to save ~ID liVet.11• • 'l'bo .memorl[lldwri wu ••tecf_.ln adwlce of the , Prealdent'a a-1' to the 11at100 toni&ht in which he will seek to allay fear• Iha!. the allied thrust lnto Cambodia mar widen the war in soUtheUt Alla. · · The· memo. sa1d that Communiat foreea bave "enonnously increased" their hoot1le acUvlllea in Cambodia ud" llill ' ' - tolgnote tbe1ll '0woulil prtleht, an -Amfrican f1:tnk to t11it •my." , "11lis ii net a loq.4trm 'quScband' operaUon that would lead to a new 'Vietnam tdtuaUon' In Can,ibo4ii~' .ttif Jelter sakl. "ll la a 1~ operation that.is an 1ntearaLpart.of,0ur operlltons in Vietnam. It Is not in rtply to any of (Cambodian Premier) J..oo Nol's re- quests for aid to Cambodia:" • Noting lbat "Saigon 11 '<mlf a miles I liom Cambodia," the lllllerneljt lafd '!th.ii effort. to clean .out tbe ~Y will result in a saving of American ·lives.' .. "Only the President bas all the facts on this situation," tbe'lthbe HCme Diemo Wd. "He must act in what be considers to be the but laterellll .ol. our COilntry and our troopa." Fro111 P .. e l SHOOTING .•. · . I : Sqlons , • • ' \ .. ' I • ,,,.. teli'er, ll'tiUO!\. on )\'lilt. HOOJc llllUooery, _ ,.i If CGmmuniat ~vlty In cambO(Uai,i 11nctuartu, welo lgn<nd II wou)d "jeOpardlte the entire South. Vietnamese 9J>e!aUon" and "affect cur ability to coniiaUe our wfttiidrawal.11 • ~arller a IJ,<pu~~can sena\Qr predicted that on tbe basis of a talk wllh Defense_. Secretary MeJvbt R. Laird Ulat Nlxo11's use of American force.s would be <>ft('. "a very ~ted baail." , ,sen. Ro~rt J. Dole (JI.KOii.) said )'! discus,.ct Ille situatlo~ "!'ltb Laird" Wednesday nigh!. · Dole said of U.S. involvement: "As I · tmderstind it, we're tallclng about· a two, three ·or .tour week perlotf. Then there's the bepming of the rainy season and everythina: will bog down. But it's· going tp be ~g!I for a few week&." ·' From Pllfle l ' BEAUTY ... Cuertul Cheerleadtt• ts totally theirs, not the M~tlne C~', othel'! Is the' nelgbl:Jorhood:r whtte the sait:I they have drawn a blank on clues. MOM house -bought a month ago the Jarid.scape and they began ~ plaining very loud. Now ~e certainly. not all : removed but theie' lre areas· wMre utilities have bffi'I put 1un-· der&f'Olllld." He stxrwed a section of Cout llipway in Newport B<leb futr " •ll!ll'l llld uiUl(y pol... "They caft this a kenic highway,'' he said. • .Tbele smiling young lildies will lead the cheers for Laguna Beach IDgb School varsity athletic teams be.5,1:t;g next fall. Girls are (seated from . left) M McFarland, Jey Sogawa and .Martot Cath· er. Standing (from left) are Joyce Oliver and Patty Bryan. A sll<tll• P,rl on the cheerleading squad, Dru Comstoek ,didll t make it. for the photo. "We don't have a car, a description and "wanned only lut "~4 by ;ie- of subjects .• , nothing but a dolen spent tress Jane Fooda" -lies. ' cartridges from a weapon," one detecUve "We have some • pretty ftacticirw:y uid Wedneeday abernooo. ~ .. neiMibars,0 PaQJ. said rq be1 ~erild 1"1e C"!UP of, a dozen OI' so mem'bers on the fnd lawn.1 1 . I · ' of the llDM In !he )>owe at about .. ,,._Y &It a!mOat an' old -le lfho Wilcoxen Raps Schmitz From P119e I MITCHELL •.. the same. time,. bqwever, aay that their have just ~d off the ~age and wallantl ltll Marines:~ are obviously acired to dfath. ·' • • The ..group's allegations come from "We have a couple of long-haired their,ob'viowlly W'lpopular causes on the neighbors next door, but tbat'' all," sprawUng camp Pendleton Marine base he added. He aClvised the group to conUnue this campatgb and to fight for the planUng· of trees along streets. "Scenic El Toro Road Is one eiample of a highway that is rapidly losing its trees. Get out and protest," he said. ' . -unpopular among the officers, but Obvioosly the -neighbors have a· right In Missinn'Viejo Talk ....... y little criUcal of the eiperimentatlon that growing in papularity among th e to their fear. ·-on." .. ._....., .. one MDM member clllms. the .......... ,...v,_ A dozen bullets pointed that out He cited a aitu.atlon In whlch an a<J.. Race riots on the base last Ft!b. 11 other night, and now that the victims mini~~-tnnova•-:oi r were blamed by the Marines on the have anned themselves and set up °" ·--\e\I 1 P o g 1 a m MDM . ~oup, "· Stu•-ts for a Yeo then focused his attack on street furniture singling oµt roadside benches"· with "'their billboard like messages and~ tbe rows and rows of newspaper veDding: madtines. · H-· -Ir polluting 0r..,.. County ,.. aod verbal sewage is pallutll!I Onnie Coooty's atmoOphere In lie race for U.S. Co-. candlda!e Willlam Wllcoun charged Tueaclay In M-Vlejo. The 17-yeaH!d Laguna Beach attorney apob belor<! cldzsw at M~ Viejo HIP Sd!ool, hitting a vulllly of loplct 1n a quaUoa-and-annm eession af. lenranl. lie ....... at ~ candldtt. Stale 8'n. John G. Schmllz (JI.Tustin) In Ille flnt rwnd ol the nlght while toudinC atber milters in relation to bb '*"-'llre doll' need ........ -t1!4t ts tied lo ..._. ldeol!>l1es .. .....aibd Ille oor. -Wi>o ~ hlmlel! a w+lttw. "1fe·-.-Y real pldllema to oolve,• .,. aided, mus;., ti>at hll -nt In .... ...... to nplaco the> late ~ Jamer Jl. u~ (Jl.Tuatin) bun'i coneemed hhn,.lf wllh them. Dlacwaing public property uae, Wilcox- en cited hia own Save SaJt Creek cam· paign and praised Orange Coonty Dog Obedience Oasses Slated Dos ownera IUD may regiater for a novice dot obedience class beginning M1y 5, Laguna Bead! Recreation Depart-ment cUrtictor George Fowler said today. F1t for the moe..weet course is $20 and eoroUment will be limited to the f1nt JO ~Ill to sign up at the Recrea- ,tion Department office, 175 N. Coast Hlgbway, in the old Boys' Club building. C1aaM wW be held lrom 7 In 8 p.m. on Tueaday ni&hU on the basketball ~ adjacent to the building on the Main B<leb. Instructor will be Jackie Niles, licensed Americin Kennel Club handler and lrafner. !lop muat be at least three l1lO!ltha ~ and must. wear a ,choke collar and aiX·foot lea.sh. Junior handlers must be at lent eJ&ht years old and accompanied by. an adalL DAILY PILOT ............ H•IMtMINP ~.... .. ...... ,..., C.... ..... ,_ Clo 11it1W OltAMOI COAST l"U•LllHlNG COM .. AMY 9!1li1rt N. Wtt4 ~ .......... htllfMI' Jeck 91. C111rl1! Ylclt ........ , ..... 0-. M_,.. Tlitm•• Kt1¥il Edllor Tl!o11111 A. Murplli~I MIN9'"'9 EdllOr ll:lcfi1nl P. Ntll Mull\ Ort-c-tr Edl!Or Offlc" (1$11 Mtu: :tJ0 Wu! II'( 5ttHI H..,.,.1 Btldl: 7211 weu 11 .. 1 aou1ev1 .. 1 ~ I NCll• m l'-1 AY- MljM ....... kldl: 17'1S ltadl a~.-11• C.......,., J0:S '""111 l!I C•mll'O llHI billLT .. ILOT. wllll ~ i. amlllflU 111111 ,.._..,_ ........ ,111¥ ~ ._ ..., "" ......... clllt .... "' LtWll •t.:tllo ......... liMdl. C.i. Mtw. Hvnlll'lf!<M ~ ... l'-.Mlll W•l .. J, •"'°'I .. Ill -, .. ~ ""' ... ar..,.. c;e.,., "'*llillllfll ~ ,...,, ........... .,. .t Bii Wttt ...... 1¥11 .. "-' ltteti, ., .. );If Wftf .. , """"' c:. .. ~. , .. :'••• 1714) 64lo4Jl1 Cf 'fW ~ .. '41·1671 S. C....... Al Dt,_.••fn T'11pli111 491"44n CliPrrtllW. ""' °'*""" U.at ......... c-.tf!f, ... ..... •Witt. ftlftlf•l-dllfrlll ,,..,.., ... 14Wl"l~t1 .,.,...... _, -''"""°'" -...,, ...... ,.,.. "*-* ., _,,., """· .... ( ......... t>tlf ,, ""''*" ltadl ..... ,,.. .......... (.all..,..., UbK(' .... t¥ un"lilr ti_. _1111,, ltJ '""' U.• -IM'fl ......... llMllMto sa.-. 1191jhly, authorities for taking new steps to guarantee public be1ch access up and down the coast. He dl!Cllssed his proposal for the formation of a S.nta Margarita NaUonal Park wbidr would Include part ol Cleveland National· Forf:st and the northerly areas of Camp Pendleton. "This area lends Itself to national park status. I think It ahould aeriou.sly · be considered since it ooul~ be used on a 12-morih basis." He moved to an environnltental pro- blem, one that facet this clistrlct, that of proper sewage treatment. "This isn't a very romantic sUbject," WDco1en said, "but there are violatklns of the water-quality control standards throughout this distrlt"l. We have to take !ltVete mealW'et ao that we will not furiher pollut. the ocean. Tbe pollu- tion 11 alteldy ocourrtng. Tbla problem may ~.e federal uai.stance to llOlve." In the area or 'education the father of foi!r said hla niCord Is one of support for education. He Rid he has been cobcerned because the property tu has become more and more unequltabte for school finlnclng . He· said he believes tax sharing will be increasing on the national level since education is our coun try 's chief defense. On another tnue he voiced dl!satlsfac· tion that Congress haa lost control of the spending funcUon. "Rule by executive order Instead of Congressional control has gotten out of hand," he said. He promised to bring fiscal responslblUty back to the Congress. Attorney Added To Plan Meetings 'lbe Laguna Beach Planning Ccni· mission will have a city attorney present at all future meetings, commission secretary Al Autry advised planners at a study session this week. The need for readily available legal advice at planning sessions was pointed out again by acting cbalnnan Joseph Tomehak when two Items had to be de- ferred for legal opinions at the commls· sion's last meeting. Advised tnat the proposal would be considered in city budget studies, Tomehak sakl, "That would mean July. Meanwhile this situation is frustrating for us and for the peuple who come here e:a:pecting a decision." At thia week's study leS.!lkln, Autry said he had discussed the problem with City Manager James Wheaton, who agreed the Planning Canmts&on, like the City Council ahould have regular representation from the city attorney's office at all meetings. tea,..,1 .... u .... ap&"'--to t.-Mi•-1.....11 •· 111e Ut:U "security" at the house around the clock, clat;;d bt'U:-~ ~·1 ibh-d PDemanlhocreraPu:.+v Socl. ety and the Black the tenseness of the situation ls obvious. -•-••--1a~ -·'d not d ... •; And the MDM monmeiat oOw has grlNCI. Wll1C'I: 7tll'I ..,.., \NW rea ""--MOM apo•e-en cbar•e !hat arxl write. '1n:: • """ a its martyr, " _ the Corp! has blamed them wrongly for The MOM leaflet heraldfug tonight's MM.chell aald he felt the state Board inciting the violent disturbances. rally says: of Education had tried to be effecUve "We will not be intimidated,'• "Brother Jesse was shot down because in the past ,but aaid there .bad been t1pokesm.an Tom Hurwitz said in a he stood up to speak for and to· the diSl'UJ>tlOOS to educaUon and "a lot prepared itatement Wednesday, i•Ne1ther people who are being persecu~ by ofT~!f..~~lng oo.~--•-lblUt the brus, nor the terrorists will stop the military .•. when firat put on the am:i MN one ~-reapom Y us from comlnuing to fight for the rights 1Strefcher 'Brother Jesse shouted · 'all haa been budfetlng for the boanl ol of Gls." pawer to the people'." education. He said he was concerned And to illustrate their point, the group But not all the wrath of the MDM Tbe-award·winning architect who IS: a member of the UCI Project 21 Open Space Study Team blamed a great deaL of ugliness on the various city and.> county departments which d on ' r cooperate. ·From Page l KOPECHNE. •• over the relationship of the !late board announced plans immediately after the ls almed at the .military . ~~~~iio:'Jtlsa1:T::; ~h-~tlnekl for a demonstration at than Civilian portce are equally to blame, intend-to go to Edgartown, h1clµWng: internally/' aald Tea.It. "I don't th!nk ""-...:ans e park tonight to protest e several members said aa they pondered -Miss Kopechne left her purse at . it is effective.'' incident. what to do about a broken mimeograph the cottage where she and Kennedy . "We upect at least 1,000 marchers," machlne. had been attending a party for Kennedy., He said the department had a lremen· one member said with a smile. "1bey and the milltary work hand-in· friends and 0 boller room" girls who dous llD8Wlt of money to pass out and 'Ibe rally tonight will be followed by hand. You can't have oppression in tbe had worked ht the Robert Kennedy cam- said he was not sure that it reviewed ''Nine Days in May," a ltl'ies of marches mlllt.ary without cooperation from the paign, including Miss Kopecbne. the Ille to which the money waa _pul in the city protesting tbe same thing. police," ooe member said. -Miss Kopecbne did not ask her room- .. __ tblnb it Is ln)portanl or l!IOY ln foci, poslm beraldlng <!he nine But the 0lilocltlng polilted out one In-mate at the mot.I for the key to their would not .. have appropriated llf:Ve!'al ~ days le"ed a ierve a dual purpose CQmistency ' -TH'lents after the roofn before leaving the party. dJ'!ds cl mllliom," Teale llid.. th ·~... ber·'• . Teal< uMd Mitchtjl'a ""'•"-. Mitchell at e MDM house .....; -to ~ vigilante c sped H Into the darknela -The ferry that crossed from <llap-' ~ ••• "!!:""'"he h the__... ..i <llallel.abaltorod aomeone In ·the house made a phone paqniddick •laland to Edprt<Jwn alopped said be didnt •nu., 9ll1'IOllll 11 U:tui wlndo;I., ,,.:~ :.-~-· .':-~-; call for help. atmidnlght,andnospecialarrangements far attended only three meetlnp ol. the One obvious worry-to the CfWP and They_ called...,tbe police. for a Jater crossing had been made. board. r-;;;;:;:;;::;;;;;::;;:;:;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;::;;;~;;;;:::;;;:;~~ ff~tK~~~~ ·i1it·:.s1~i>ROOMSALEf .: mlslng programs. Mitdlell responded thal the Orance County School Board had aa economlcal an operation u any ln the Rate1 and told ot his own work to strengthen its operation. Pressing his question, Teale asked if the state hoard and · state. clepartment of education had been cX muCh help. Mitchell said yes It had but added that there is only so much money to pass out. Teale said a bit lat.er, "I didn't get an answer. HoW effective has the depart- ment and tbe state board been in furnishing leadership?" Mitchell said Orange County had received a good deal of cooperation and opined that with the present board tbe relatioMhip with Rafferty's office will be a smoother one. Teale ; said it waa: one thing to a:et cooperation when. you ask for it and ;till another thing to furnish leaderahlp. Two senators on the rules committee C<>1llmended Mitchell for giving candid answers. Smiling Mitchell said. ''I'm not doln1 it for the money, you know." The post Is not one that ii salaried. Gets Conspiracy Rap NEW VORK (UP!) -Carlo Gambino. \he alleged "boss of bosses" of aU Malla families, was indicted WedDesday . on charges cf conspiring to hijack an armored truck transporting mllliona of dollars ii cash. •, Thi tan11111i.111n lf1g1n11 vou"d •ICPK't to cost m~, ............ Salle on elegant triple dresser bedrooms by Lenoir House 539 Set Sail Fleet Off to Ensenada Under bright, sunny skies and light southwesterly winds, a fleet of catamarans led 539 sailing yachts off Newport Harbor at the sjroke of noon loday in the start of the 23rd annual Newport- Ensenada yacht race. ' The anUcipaled lleld of 565 was cut to 539 at the starting gun as 31 crafl dropped out. Boats started streaming out of the jelly at 10:30 a.m. heading for the dual starting line• off the Balboa Pier. The cats went off at noon sharp wilb three other divisions following at 10 miaute .inter .. vats. The first boals will start arriving in Ensehda, 126 nautical miles away early on 'Friday. The complete list enlrles (Including the dropouts) wtll be found on Page 8 of today's DAILY PILOT •• .. SEE OUR FULL PAQE AD IN ~AM!LY WE!KLY -MAY 2 H.J.GARRE PROFESSICNAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS 2215 HARBOR !LVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF • 646-0275. 64'-0276 I I I . • ' ' ... '• "" ' id -(' •n •n . .,. ' .. Is •(' le ts ~t, ?S d: ": 1,: " tl od. r .. •t. ly ' ly, .. ,. ,. Ir " ' I ! I I ! • • . '* . . . -- vot:. 63, NO. 103, 3 SECTIONS. +4 PAGES ' ' ORANG~ «OUNTY, C:ALIFORNIA THU/t50,._Y, APR IL 30,_ 1970- ... ' l".''. 1TEN <;l9lfs •• • I Solon Still Opposes Mitchel~; Cliitll6es Slim · -.. By RICHARD P. NALL ot ,.. DallY ,llfl tl•tt SACRAMENTO -State Senator Allred E. Alquial ({).San Jose), today vowed lo try and block the appointment ol South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell to the State Board of Education. "l will opPoee Mr. Mitchell 's ap- pointment on the Senate floor, not . because of his reactionary politics bu~ because or 'his dismal record of performance _ on the 9nmge Coµnty ' ' school board ," said Alqulst. And although Alqulst would only need 14 votes 'to accomplish the task, his chances of success seemed doubtful. It takes a two-thirds vote, 27 senators, of the 4G-member Senate to confirm the governor's appointment. It has been rare In the past fer the senate to turn dawn a gubernatorial aQPOintment or even for senators to spend as mw:h time with it as they have alre~ put In on Mitchell. Narmally the senate has taken the af. Utude It is a aubernatoriaJ pn!rogaUve and problem. · Alquisl, who is a candidate for lieutenant governor, said or Mitchell, "The unrefuted evidence shows he simply does not meet the quaUlicaUons for this important statewide oUke. "I think ·the Senate's rejecUan of Mitcb~ll's a~ntinent will saye Gov. Reapn · a, •great deal .al ·ruture em· barrassment." • Republican aoarces have stated that Reagan appointed the arch~rvative ~fl\chell at the strong urging af Mu Rafferty. state superintendent af public instruction. ~ ~ Mitchell, 51, 11 S. Alta Mka Rold, a retired food broker and financial ad- viser, wu not. available today to com- merit on the Alquist statements. Mitchell' Wednesday won a 4 to t cndOrsement by the powerful Senate Rults · OOnimJttee wbich can take the milter to the noor of the upper' llaJil< .,..hen It -· possibly ...i -k l f the YOteJ ue allied down.for MJ1"111JL Alqµlot aldei said today lhot 1M ·senator ha1 four sure votes q-. MlJcbell and lncJ\her five '!IOI pn>NbJO lnL ' Ol1e or the """' qalnst Mitchell Is lik!IY, that of Sen.' ~ P. Tt11e, (O.Weat Point), a llM!Dlh<r of the rula commJUee and ·the eole no vote Wed- nesday. um1n· ver Wi,tla V.S. Help Viets Hit Deep Into Cambodia ' • SAIGON (UPI) -Four lank-led Soulh Vietnamese Wk forces estimated at 1,000 men drove dee p into Cambodia today with U.S. air support. and their commander _.announced they woukl re· main :•tor many days" 'to trap and destroy th!Jusa.nd• Of eommuni!t troo~ in tl>elr.oiiellm< sanctuary. The main thrust &jong: Highway 1 Judinl from Sa.ip· to -Phnom Penh overran -the Cambodian towns of ChipoU and Prasault, ~ miles ~ Cambodia, and wa1 pushing westward towa~s Cam- bodian . troops based . at Svay R!eng,_ 40 miles inside Cambodia and 70 alt m1les from Phnom Penh. Three task forces eStimated at 2,500 each drove into Cambodia In the.Parrot's Beak sector which juts into South Viet· nam to within 35 miles of Saigon. A fourth task force of 1,500 _pushed across the border from the Mekong Delta town Of·· JOeng Tuong to try to cut off IS,000 Viet Cong in the area. .so far the South Vietnamese report killing 445 Viet Cong and North Viet- namese troops and capturing vast _sup- ;ues of equipment at a loss of 32 killed arid 112 wounded, S$ of the w~nded itrafed by mistake by U.S. helicopter gunships. Two U.S. advisers were reported wounded. . Although a Cambodian spokesman m Phnom Penh. said his government ~uld not approve the allied aperatlon, since lt violated CambOdi an neutrality, front dispatches said the opera~ion was coordinated with the Cam~1an ~rmy lo the extent a dozen Cambodians hnked up with the advancing Vietnamese forces as_guicles. . The fi rst offi cially acknowled_ged drive Into Cambodia by Sooth Vietnamese troopS had the olficia\ purpose ~f destroy- ing Viet Cong and North V1etname!e base camps near the border. Bu{ .as lBe Communisl.s fled from the alhes _ aome in commandeered cars -the scope of the acUon was extended. LL Gen. Do Cao Tri said he ,"!'as extending the aperalian because : We will need many days to search the area thoroughly. we will try to control the arta, to trap them inside and destroy them." He said three brigades of ~th Viet· namese troops were involved m the push aking Highway 1. Newly structured South Oruge Coast' Weatlier Slnsblne is the order of the day ftir Friday, with temperatures in the slllmmerinf 70's alOlli the coast ·and UP to a sl.a.lin& IO de- gre<s further inland. I NSIDE TODA.Y Tilt "cable cttr nomrd desire" rolled 1tp to a $50.000 pauoff for tile girl wlio lost more than her heart in San Fra11cisco. Ste Page -4. (ttlt.nll• CllK-lflt U• C .. ltlffwf ""'"' , __ 0..fll Mtlk• tfL..ntl , ... tllttrt•-' ··--..,,_, { , • ' M·~l " " " • .... ... .. " 'f ·' ' Vietnamese brigades total about 80 per· cent ~ American ar~y brigade of 4,SQO men, but military sourcea in Saigon saf8'Tri'siarCe!. totaled about 7,500 men. Russell illid... American advisers were vis.Wle ~I~ the route, handlln1 radio ~""'. aJ1d ~~ map coofttinates:. Tbi!re allo were a number ol Greur Beret ·men with Cambodlaq ~ sroups which have betn used apmst the Vie\ eon, near the MekoQf Delta regian for years. Ted Kennedy Says Ruling Not Justified BOSTON (UPI) -Judge James A . Boyle, refuting sworn testimony by F.dward M.· Kennedy, says the Massacbusetls senalof' wu tiling Mary Jo Kopechne down a road that lid only to a secluded bea ch the ni1ht she drown- ed. Ke'lfledy says he hid beea takini Miss Kopechne back to drop her off at her motel. He rejected "the inferent.-es and ultimate finding of the jud1e's report" as not "justified." Boyle, in his findings an the celebrated case, said Kennedy probably was driving negligently. He left open the 'matter of whether criminal charges might be pressed -although further actian ap- peared unlikely. Miss KapecJ:ioe, 28, a former secretary for Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, drowned when Kenned)t's auto went off a bridge at Chappaquiddick Island, Mw., the night of July 18, 1969. The testimony and Boyle's findings at the inquest in Edgartown from Jan. M were made public Wedtlesday. Kennedy, in his testimony, said he was taking Miss Kopechoe back -ta her motel room in F.dgartown when he made a wrong tum and went 7 /IOths al a mile down the wrong road -the road that led across a wooden bridge spanning a tidal pond. The auto. with Kennedy at the wheel, went oft the bridge and landed upside dow n In the pond, drowning the girl. , Boyle noted several points that came out in the teatimony to back his feeling Kennedy and Miss Kopechne did· not (Seo KOPECRNE, P11e %J Runoff Slated At 'Viejo Higli A rorH>f{ election tod ay for vice pres!· dent of Mission Viejo High School's aswciated student bodf will round out the cast or new student office rs. The runoff i1 ·between candidates Greg Hebets and Ray Delgatto. Neither received a ma;orlty in the Wednc.5day election. Other new officers are Donna Conally. president: Pam Davis, secretary: Je(f Masterson, treasurer; Thelma Giddens, acUvities coordinator : Steve Ashcraft . publicity chairman ; Sue Schaeffer, pep commissioner; Hans Duncan, senior representative; Andre Holmes, junior representative: ind Bob F c r I us on , sophomore representaUve. • !~ I , I~. I .f ! f: . ~ • • ~ i • . :5 .\ $1 1 ri, •• , . M ~} " Orange I . Coast Architect Wages War on Ug liness By PAMELA HAUAN Of .,.. Dallr r 11.t 11.n Ronald Yeo, "the Ralph Nader of Orm1ge Coast beautification." Wednesda.Y brought hls fight against ugliness to the Capistrano Bay Lague of Women Voters. Through a -of sr\c1es, the archlte<t arid conservationfst shewed , the • gnNp what they should be nOUclng and how to get rid()( what they doo't like. "Yau have an opportunity here -Vi thls are.a to learn from the mistakes other communities h'ave made," .said Yeo. "Ten years ago, Garden Grove had an opporttmity to learn rrom the mistakes Los Angeles made but ii didn't." He told them he was waging a war against ugliness and asked them to help by looking around the next time they drive down the street. "A majority af our problems h'avc sprung up around transportation, said Yeo flashing a picture af a freeway on the screen. "The automabile bas . creatfld storage. malnlenaoce and refueling problems." He then showed a series , of pictures ol clhU.red, sipgor1ed fundion1l gas atstloos. h" .. "You can do aometh\n.I about t 11, said the Corona del Mar man. "The next time You pay · your credit card bill encloSe a letter to the compaoy comp1alnt.1g abOUt the ugliness." He then showed a series of Imaginatively design- STOCK Jll AR KET NEW YORK (AP) -The stock_ market continued Ila downward drift th11 aftf'r· noon after an early momlng rally falled to gain support. Tradifl& was slow. (See quotations, Pages 31-33) . cd gas stations with planters full or trees, the result of so m e b o d y ' s · beau tification acmpalgn. He assured the group. that Individuals can do something to beautl/y sur- roundings even ,wben it means lighting giant corporatians. 'ITtle war on utility poles Is a good example," he sald. "People began reallt- in.-;: that utility polesa re a blight on (See BEAUTY. Pa1e %1 Planes Overfly Nixon's Home Private planes are penetra ting lhe air security surrounding Presi· dent Nixon 's Western White House. In a press release, Arvin o .. Basnight, director of the Federal Aviation Agency's n l n e • s•t ate western reelon, reported that since notice or the prohibited area, for the Presiden t's safety,. was .made · public last fall there have been . numerous violations. "~vere penalties, I n c 1 \I d i n I t suspension of pilot llctnses, have been and are being a·~ lfgalnat these violators," uid • Basnight. "We ask the coOperaUon or ' all pHols flyin• In the vicinity of the Swnmer White House, to avokl · the prohibited area and help ins ure ttw. Preslde.nt11 profectlt1n 'and safe- ty." The prohibition Is In effect at all ti mes, not just when lhe Presl· dent is in re.sidcoce, he stated. 'tbe airspace security area has a radius af about one nauUcal mile. Group Vows To Be Ready 'Next Ti1ne' By JOHN VALT~~ZA . ot r11t DolllJ Pllll ltefl "They all call us a violent organl.zatlon, but we ~on't go araund spraying machibe guns blto people's houses," Paul said, g82.ing at bullet holes Jn the buff stucco hause in. Oceanside. · J'he ~h1 wearil'll bu~hy sldfbur~; fr~y . 'h~ and a butlon Willi Che UUe!'fil.'.J ~all In .• "'! .' llltl lifitl pOlnt!'d out.Filtered' wind<iws, i' bUl!et· chjpped ~lk; tbeq vowet! · "Wt're a~q: ou~V~s now, ~wt'll1bt rti.dy to'~ fun1tlves Dezt um..'' -f-; 'l)ie' pnt Ume occJmd 1hout'niidl!lilrt TUesdiy when three men 'dtove lb frdnt <.l tM heaCSquarters of the Movement l<r a Democratic Military ·(MOM) ;.~ OP.tned up with a machine gun. The burst of a dozen slugs ripped ~h the .fl'Qrlt or the residence and oqe shot hll a Marine before he coil.Id Jilt the floor. "Jt hit brother Jesse (Woodward) In the arm, then went Into his chest. Thf sli.lg stopptd aboilt an inch from tiis heart," Paul ~xplained. Woodward, police said, \YU a Martne Corps deserter. He Is recovering after surgery at the U.S. Nav~I Hospital. Other bullets lodged Into walls and ripped through posters h a n g i n g throu1hout the house. . One 1lug first went through the bick af Eldridge Cleaver's head Jn one poster, then passed through a poster sbawiQ& a clenchtd fist holdJng a ri~le complete with a slogan about arming oneself by· Bobby Seale, then ~·hizzed past four inhabitants of the house, fl'J111ly to s.top in 1 far wall . It hit a poster photo ar Che Gu8v.ara In the left cheek before finally stopping. Leads to the identity of the v\sitantes -witnesses said they· were thrj!t in nu1 .ber -number zero. , Oceanside police, who say the case (Set SHOOTING, P•ae t) Potter y Shack Ma y Get Pole Sign After All It apptars that Roy Childs, own.er of Laguna 's colorful Pottery Shack, will be able to put up a conforming sign on his parking lot without erecting a building to' support It. Seeking to repla ce a large. existing pole sign Identifying the lot with a smaller more artistic carved wood sign, Chllds discovered that the new sign ordinance reqUlres si1111 Jn R-3 zones · be atlfched-.to building.a. Pointing out that the parking lot was not equipped with a building. Childs applied for a variance to permit the pol( sliO: ' The matter was further complicated when reading of local codes indicated patki~g_lo~ lq R-3 zon~ !!OIJld be pennlt. ted only urider condltli>nal "" ~nni,ts, which also-take care Of sl&flhig. ' Tbete· "weren't any eondltionil' ~ permits when he put in • the parking lot, Cbikls explained: · · Planners . •greed t~•t rezon ing .would 10lve the whole problem, but th is seemed unduly com pie• ror such..!. fml!ll pl;l~ttr and anyway1 reiqnjng PfObably !ihoUld await completion of the g!nl!ral pian . This week, commissioners leanied the city attorney ~ad ruled out C9ndltio'l81 UJe permit procedure and lndjc~ted th'At the variance Childs orlglnaJly requested proboblr wolild do the trick' The coin· mlstloh will act on lhe request at Its , Declines outnumbered advances by a small margin. Earlier, advances had been ahead by almost four to one. • ,_ __ ,..... _____ ...;;.._...;.·-;,··-rea:ul•~ Mondi.)' mteUQI. ··, .. ·~· .f • Alter Alqulst lnterror11<d Mlldtoltwllb permluloo of (be rules commlilOt, Tlolo t°'* .. er and asked Mlldoeli to - the IUftctlons of the State Boord o1 Edlatioll. MlkMD aid It sb®kl strive to *""' the beS educauonaI system pollible lit youngiter'S. ,,,_..- Mitcbell1 wOO Calla for a n6in to the ballc prinCJplei of ed~ •• Mid ' be doe! not oppooe· chlnp but II. 1 (Seo MJTCIID.L, Pip I) . ,. .. , ,,...,":\I'· CHE POSTl!Jl-PUNGTUJllD Armed C•mpt In OC.1MW. Student · Lea'der ' Denies Charges By Councilman · Lacuna Beach High• School Sludent Body President Howard HUia thfi wtek denied Clty Cbuncilman Edward ~·1 charge that s~lldenta had '.P-ruc~tecf in the tax averi-ide elecUOn 1qoipijp with the encouragement af the 'ICbdol board. Lorr recently accused the board of "playing on the emotions of the voter!" hv u.sing students to campaign for the la:ic. Schoo! Board President Larry Taylor , specifically denied the charge, bolntlng cut that inquiring studenta had · bern informed the board could not use · them for such activity. In an April za Jetter addressed to . Lorr as presldent of the Lagllnol Bach Taxpayers' AssoclaUon, and today relfu. ed to lhe press, Hills wrote : "As presldtnt o( the Laguna Beach High School Student • Body I ilm dismayed about your recent ' rqro&ch or °"" ICbool board. While It • 11 not my lntenUon to deny !bat the vut ,..... jority ot students and teachers natunl!J favored !be issue, It ls 1complete'1 fallaciou.s to imply that any_ prelSW'li was brought to bear ... to enlist Student support." Students who did support the 1ehoola. said ftills. did so under the pratection af the U.S. Constitution. Bahe Ruth Ball' Tryouts S~&ted Laguna Beach .,.. boy1 aget! 11 through 15 are Invited to porllcl_pate, In th> ann¥.'I Babe Buth Lia ... 'tilo!ita sc,heduled from 9 a.m. ·to noon• at fbt h!&b school bOseball field Slhlrd.07, U., 2 and again on Saturday, May 1.1 • League play wlll begin Junt ... ~w. h,pe for a good tumoUt.'' said 'Mrl. ·1h Sweany, "IO we Cln have m teams. We expect at least enoqR bl..: for fiw-e ·teams, but sl.-WOUid be bettfi.~"'1 Partlclponts should 11111> lhelr blrtll, ctrtlflcatt s. S3 regiatratlon , lee Ud a ml\t, If they have one, to the tr;oub. • /Those ellglblC .are boys who wlb , be 13 ""by Aug. I and not more thin JI by toat d•lc. ' Further Information m'y bo obtained b' calllnl Mt1. Swean,y at 4tMl.lll. • ,I J r I' These smiling young ladies . will "lead the cheers for Laguna Beach Higll School varsity atlll~uc teams ~ uni fall. Girls are ·(saated_ from left) Mfll!lda McFarland, Joy Sogawa and ~ot Call>-. ------- er~StandlnJ (from left) are Joyce Oliver and Palty Bryan. A sixtll ~irl on the cheerleadlng squad0 Dru ((oms1'>cl< ,didn t mllke it for the plloto. •• ' -~-l • ""' i " ··~~*11'%) -TbO.-Wh!lt 1':1Q. · ~ • . '"'°"1d prtlent 1n ol!'ftt • • tier, wrllllli on Wblto ~ '.":' -tty ·.... ,Amltjjtao 11ant to tbt ...... ,r . ~ ' · , 1aJ u CommuJ!lat aouvt1y 1hat, ~~jot ·~jjJlP ·'lllasll JIOI. a loog-ltrm 'qulctaantl' ji-ambo41an aaoctUartes were lgoored .lnvalve •the IJnllod -at!Gn. fha~ would lead.'\!> •· new jt ould .''Jeopardlae tbe entire Soutlt Sla&el )n ··~~f1"'1 q1~rwt •J>er-.. t 'Vletnlll) si.tuatlon' in Cln1bDdill~' ttil& .y· i0pera1Jon:• aod ~':attect our Uon" in CArri ' • . r letter said. ''It ii a 1trlke opieraUon ' '.ab ty"to oontlftue our withdrawal!' Bat the fllfllped statent•nt ctrculated'-·!Dru· an lnttgral part of onr oper~ •. .,..11 ... a lle}>ubllcan aeaat« ~ on Capitol 1111' 881\f the'Prealdent found In Vleb)am. · 11 i,. not In reply to any ~ on the ~· of a talk wIU: 1:1~ It neceesary lo)eJid tidtisors alljf anYll ·at (Cambodian Premtor) ,Loa·Nol~ ,... JJlary M•lvln R. Laird that N"""1 in'..o Cambodia frmil.: 'Qeblam "to sav •'esta for aid to CambodW." · '· 1 , or ~Mean rorce1 would be • American livei." • • ':.,._ , . · •.Hoillil.Jbil '.'Saigon is ~ .-~-very llnd1ed baall." I The me.-i.t -drcl\lllod In . rr.rn le.in .. , .. the jl.-t lild ·;lie•· Robert J. Dole .(tic.I.) said · advahce of the"" 'Pl.went'• s1)eech 1o flJtU :effort ' to clean ·out the enrmy ~ he"' discuwd' the situatkto t with Laild the uUon tlilllght In which-be will ... k . will. frsutt In a ·uvJnrot-Amerlcan W-sdar n;gbt to allay fears th.a~ -the;' allied thrust llyes.' • . . Pole .saJd of U.S. involvtme:nt: "AB into Cambodia ma.y "'~~the war in . , "On& the President .has .all the. fa~ls I i understaQ4 )ti_., ~e:r,. talking about southeast Asia. , .. J.•. :. ;.. on UUs situation/' the 'White House memo a two, three, or;toUr ~kt:~. Then The memo said that comintmlst forces said. "He m\LSt act in what he considers U}ert'~ the begtitntrlg'of1tbi'i'airiy season have "el!Ol)llC\uslY ~a*'I" their · to be 'the best ir!terests of our country .00 everythlni •l!I :btigl ilciin. Bat ll~ bosUle actlvl\le! 1n· .Clll!~ alld that and our lroops." going to be lough fi>rla 1f!W wteu." . ,,. , .. •• I ' •'' ' "" .... , .. ,...,.. P .. e . . From Pflfie I l · SHOOTING-.,.,.-: BEAUTY .~. c ' ls tolally theln,. 1191 the Marl11< COIJ!&', · oihers ls the n~gb¥riiood' wher. the the l~~ajie . and they began ~ s:i.id they hav~ dra'wn ab~ on ·clues. MDM house -bought a month ago plainµtg vt? lOud. Now they're certalnlJ "We don 't have . a car, 11 ·jlesc:dP,t.l~ , 1\lld "warmed only lut-weekeM by a~ not..,-"~ .reJJJ<ryed b,Ut ~ are areu of subjects ... riotbing but a &:;en-Q>e.r¢ tr,ess Jane Fonda" -lies. ~-1 where uUHUes hi.le beeJ1 put un- cartrldges from a we.apor/' .Ott' ~tectl\te .l 'We . h11ve .aQme 'pr*tty mctionary dercroµnd ." He sbowed a · sectba fl said Wednesdlty ~t .....• f-( ~gbbors'" Paol ,aaid a ~he '.bunkered Coast iJllgbway Jn Ntwport{Beaeh ildl The if'OUP of a1dozen' or so'.Jiierribtrs 'on the fr00t IaWo. of lligM and utility polel.· '"lbf7 cit ~· --• of the MOM ' In .. \be bou.se .-at a~t "They •are almOst all old' people Who this a scenic highway,~· he ,.,ut. . -\ the ~ame time, ho~ever, IHIY that theJt havi j\llt-i>!id off the .mortgage . ancf -He, advised the group to continue thJy Fron• Page I assailants ar~ Mannes._ are obvlously seated to death. campaign and to fight for the planUng T:he groups allegations come from "We have a couple of long-haired of trees along streets. their obviously unpopular causes on the neighbors· next door but that's _ all " "Scenic El Toro Road is one exampl. sprawling Camp .Pendleton Marine base he adde.d~. _ ' _ ' of a higllway that is rlipidly losing lts" Wi.leoxen Raps Schmitz MITCHELL ••. ' . ~ -~popular among the officers, but Obviously the neighbors have a right trees. ·eel out and protest," be said. lJUle criUca1 of the eiperlmentatlon thit"~ growmg in popularlly amooa:. the to their fear . Yeo then focused his attack on :street goes on." -"peona/' one MDM m&.ber clain:i9. A dozen bullets pointed that out the flu'niture singling out roadside ::a. He cited " litutianJn which -.;a+: Race riots on the bue lut Feb. 11 other J)igbl, and now that the victims , with u.e,1r b1l1board like meuagea mlnia9'M tmovated a pr o'g r am were blamed · by the Marina • qn. the haft ~m~<t themselves and set up ' the rows and 'J'oWS d. newspaper teadUnC Jtnt crad911 to type. MltCbell MDM group, ~ Students· for a "security" at the house around the clock, machines. In 'Mission Viejo Talk Bliman' ..,,.,e 11 poDutlng Orange autborlUes for takillg new 1ltps to clatmed that tbe WHWDed district'• thii'd Democratic Society and the Black the tenseness of the situation is obvious. The award-winning arehltect wbo is County .U and verbal sewage ii guarantee public beach acceu up and grlden ttree yeara later could not read Pantber Party. And the--MOM· movement -now-has a member of the UCI Project %1 Open _,,_...__ ~ County" ~....,.. down the coa!I. and write. • The MDM &poteameli cllar1e that Its martyr. . Spa<e Study Team blamed a ,..at deal ,,..--.-v ..... -.; 1 ..... ""'l"'"'re He dlscussed bia proposal for the ~ Q>rps ha~ll~ tbtm wrongly for The MDM leaflet heralding tot»ght's of ugliness on the various city and in the i'ace for U.S. Congre:IB, candidate formation of a Santa Mara:arita National ' .· Mitcbell-aald he felt the State Board mc1tfne the violent disturbances. rally says: county departments which don ' ~ WiWam wficoi:fn · charpd Tueeday in Park which would include part of of Education had tried to be effective "We will not be i n t i m i d at e d , • ' "Brother J6se was shot down because cooperate '1 I h In the past but aald there had been M• T H ltz Id I 01 • • • Millkm Viejo. Cleveland Natlona Forest and t e dlsruptlObl . to education and "a lot sl"""esman om urw sa n a he stood qp to speak' for and to the The 3'7·yeat-old Laguna Beach attorney northerly area! of Camp Pendleton. of inf DI. .... going on."· prepared statement WedneS:day, '·!Nel~r people wh&' . ..are beinif ·persetuteif by 'jThls area lends itaelf -to national .-.. d the brass, nor the terrorists will stop the military ... when •f111t , put Cl) the From Pn.t111e J "' spoke btfore dtlZenl at Mission ·Viejo park status. I thlnk It lbould seriously Teale . aai one Senate raponstbilily us from cominuing to fight for the righl:I stretcher Brother Jesse shouted 'all _,, Hip Scbool, hlttlnl a variety of topics be C01111idered sinoe it could be used has been budgeting for the board ol of Gu." . power to !lie .people"." in -a qUestiCJn.aoc!-amwer' aesaion af-on a 12-month buis." education. He aaid he wu concerned And to illu!lrate their point, tbe group But not all tbe wrath of the MD~t KOPECHN E. •• tenvard. He moved to an environmental pro-over tbe reJatlomh.lp of the Ute board announced plans immediately after the b aimed at the military. · Illa r •'-'-~:-t-,.;,.. that and the superintendenl "It appears the h "· 1 d u 1 "' udin r He swq at Cqreulona1 candidate blem, one t 11oes ~ wa ..... ., i1epartment d. education ts collapsing s OOWlg or a emonstra on a an Civilian police are equally to blame, intend to go to F.dgartown, cl g: _, a-•..:a-"'-· Jolm G ·~·ts (R..~~•-) of proper sewage treatment. !-'-ally," said T--•-. "l don't •'-:-'-Oceanside park tonight to protut the • several members said as tbey pondered -Miss Kopeithne Jett her purse d ...,_ --=.u. • .,.;wiu :..l~wi ' '"lb.ls isn't a very romaDtic subject," 1-11 ~ MWlA jocldent. · ' what to do about a broken mimeograph the cottage where she and Kennedy 1n 1tbe tint mmd of the night while WllCGxen saJd, 0 but there are violatk:llS it it effective." "We expect at least 1,000 marchers," machine. had been attending a-party for Kennedy .. ~ dher matters In reltiUon to '· of Jhe · w.ater ~lty coo.trol ~arda He lflicf the "department had 1 tremen-one ~be:r s•td wllh a smile. ··~y and t!)e ·mIµ41ry work hand-to-friends and "boiler room" girls who· his qpponal4o ; L • ' throughout t1111 ' diJtiict. We have to dou• Uioimt ot money to paa out and 'nle rilly tcmlght ·will· be 'f0Uot1f.d ·by hand. YoJ can•! have oppression In the had worked in.the Robert KeonedY. cam. .. "W• dodi need _ repraent&Uon that take severe meuures so that we will said he wu not sure thlt it reviewed "Nine Days Jn May," a series of marches mllltafy without coOperation fr0m 'the · palgn, Iricludlng Miss K'Qpechne. ls tied 1D hH1"*' ~" ._ not further pollute the ocean. "nle p:llJU. th,, \lie to which tbe money WIS tCt ·fn tbe clty protetUJlg the:NJrie thing. police," one rilember said. -11 -1'fi$S Ko~~ did not aft her roop>-.. the:CQOI' CMdlt!* w11o ~ , • ·ti• !loo ls a~ .._mg.,,Tbla problem "SOroeooe ~It 11 lmportaj)t or Y ID .fact, pcoten ~dlD&,the nine But the l/hootlng''poti,ted oul-one'IJ!.• mate al the moteJ for the ny to thelr: a ""*"oiift:"'1 ----'<i ' •.'...•'' I ' may.takafodiralaailotanCetoool~' ::l:::.:r.m~i:tit"'alhwl-doYS•9'fVed a..,... a.d~ purpose c6ilsl!leo"1' ..! mom"1ts after "the' rpombelor<leav!ngthepa~ .. , . <i "lfe ba"' V'tl.J'1 real PfUD ems to :Mte,' In rtbe area of education the fatq,r TeaJe U'ted Mttcbell'• .... 1 .. 1 ..... _ Mitchell at the MDM hoU&e today -to herald vigilante car sped -·off'-tnto 'the darkneas -The ferry that crossed from Oiap. he added, dili-gtn, that his opponent of lour aa.ld his record ii one of support ...,......., the marches and cow· bullet shattered S<>meone in the house made a phone paqu!ddlck rslalld to EdgartoWn stepped jn tbe race ·to replace tile "late for educaUon. He aa.ld he has betn saMI he didn't know since he bas thus wlndowL call for help. at midnight, and oo special arrangemeitt" eon_.. J11ne1 B. U~ (R..Ttutin) coocerned becau,. the property tu hag far atlendod oaly three meetinp of the One obvlOlll _,., to the group aod They called the poli<e. for a later crossing had beeo made. ~ hasn't coocerned hinuelf with them. become more and mor~ unequltable for board. r-;i::;::~::::;F:=;:=;;::~;~~;:;:;:;::;:~~~;:;~~;:~~~~~"i-~::~r; · DlliCllSS!ng publjc property use. Wll<oi-school finaoclng. Teale pointed out that Mll<hell served • • 7 •= =-=-~--r --- - en cited his own save salt Creek cam· He said be believes tax sharing will on a c:oUnty board o1 educaUon which u· IG-. Bl--:.DR· ---M-·--s~• L-E:ca-'=uo paj&u and • praised orange · Qlunty be ~creasing on the national level since :sbit ~there:~.; ~u:1:ee:~: :,.. ed~a=~~~:U:~:f'Ji:~:~. leadership and taken advantage of pro-. 1 • -e -;; Dog Obedience lion that Congress has loot control of mlsln& progr1111111. ., .. the spending functlon. Mltdlell responded that th< Orange "Rule by execuUve order instead of County School Board had as ~cal i~ a SI ed Congmsiooal cootrol has 1otten out or an operation u any In the a(!i\e.•nd :: 888e8 8 t hand." he said. He pt<lllised to bring told <i his own wort to ~· Its " Dos ownera aW1 may register for a -doS obedience clw beglonlng May 5, Lquna Beach Recrtation Depart. meat director George F1>wler said today. Fee for the nine-week course is $20 and enrollment will be limited to the f1nt » penons to l1gn up at the Recrea- tion Department office, 175 N. Cout }{jghway, in the okl Boys' Club buildin&. Cl.asses · will be hek!. from 7 to 8 p.m. on Tueaday rllghts on the basketball courts adjacent to the building on the Main Beach. Instruct« will be Jackie Niles, licensed American Kennel Club handler and trainer. Dogi must be at least three months . oW aDd muit weir a choke colJar ·and · &1%-foot leash. Junior hapdlers must be '. at leut eJ&bl years.old and accompanied by an .adult l • DAILY PILOT -----UW-IMdi ........ ,...., c ... M... a.er ....... OllANGE 'COAST PUIUiHING COMl'Mt't J:olt•rt M. w •• ~ l'ruldent MCI l"Vbllilw J•ck l. Cvtl1y Vice ""'~ aN Gtnlf•1 Mll\lllf' Th•111•1 IC11.,il Edl!Or Tllo"''' A. M1r11hl110 1 M .... liil Edltw Rich•r4 P. Nill So\llh Qn,,,. C1111r1ty Edlllr OH1C" Co$1a Mat: .uo Wtil •ir Strwl H..,...1 llKPI: 2211 W.t •1•1 ..... !1W11'f utriN ludl1 tt2 l"-1 A-"""'alfl•• lltoell: IN1i lntfl •~•,. Sin !;""""'-' JU Nlfttl El C-llie 11 .. 1 DI.II. Y "II.OT. Wiii! W:.ldl " ~ 911 -~ Ii """"""" .,u, --.._ .. , Ill ...,,.11 U lt-.. fer L..-k <.11. ....._, k6dl. Call Mtsl, H .. 1 .... 1111 ~ ft .. _ ..... Y111ty, •11111 11111111 1w1 "flllntt ......... O!'....e C.ttt l'vllll!Mftt ~ ,n.tt ... ""'"' ,,.. 11 nH wt\I ...... ~ ....,.,, ltldl. _, .. DO W.1 ..,..,.,0...,..... T ......... 17141 '4MJll a ,,,.,... .._.., .. , • .a.1,11 S. Ch II Al Dc,._.lft: , ....... 4fl"441t """"""*' "" . er... CMlt """""""" ~-.............. llkollf .. ..... ~ """" ~ ............. " .... ... _, .. ,.,.,..... wltMvl llllfCNI .,.. ,..... ..... ~-. ..... <1-.......... """""" .. f(tl .,.,, e..t1 MtM, C1l110mlf. llotlMrlellllll "' Ctrf'IW U.• lflMllll~/ ty llltll U• -11\l'JI ~twy dtt!IMI' ..... It.II _,,."· t fiscal responsibility ba~ to the Congress. operation. ~. PressiJ>I l\lz , qiieoticm, !feole ;»tod ii Attorney Added To Plan Meetings Tbe Laguna Beach Planning Com- mis.skln will have a city attcrney .pruent at all future meetings, commiasion secretary Al Autry adviaed planners at a study eslon this week. The need for readily avapable legal advic~ at ,pJaqolng sessions wu pointed out again b'-. acting chalnnan J ... ph Tomehak when two items had to be de- ferred· for legal opinions at the commjs- sion's last meeting. Advised that the propouJ Would be con~dered In city budget studlel, Tomehak said, "That would mean July. Meanwhile this situation is frustrating for us and for the people who come here eJi?eClin• a decision." At thls Week's study session, Autry said ~ had dlscusaed the problem with City Manqer James Wheaton, who agreed the Planning Commission, like the City Council shoold . hoe regular rejlfesenlatlon rram the city ·attorney's office al all meeUngs. thli state tioaid and;.alit< d~eot ol .-educatlon bad · bffn ol ni'iich help. Mitchell said yes It had but added that there is only so much money to pa§ out. Teale said a bit lat.er, "I didn't get an answer. How ef~ve has the depart- ment and the state board been in furnishing leadership?" Mitchell said Orange County had received a good deal of cooperation and opined that with the present board the · relationship with Rafferty's office will be a smoother one. Teale sAid it was one thing to ;get cooi>eratlon when, yoo ask for 'It .and sun another thing .to lumlah loadenl!lp. Two ·.enators OD the. rules committee commended M!lcbell for glVing ~d answers. Smiling Mitchell said, "I'm not doing it. for1 the money. you know." The post Is nol one that u aalaried. Get.s Compiracy Rap : NEw -YORIC (UPI) -Carlo Gambino, ~ allell'd "boa or bosse.'" of all Mafia fainJlles, was Indicted Wtdneaday on claarges or conspiring to hijack .an anuor<d lruck lransportini ·millttlol or dollars bl cash. 539 Set Sail Fleet OH to Ensenada· Uoder bright, sunny •klH and !lib! southwesterly winds, a fleet of catamarans led 539 sailing yaChts off NewP'ort Harbor al the stroke of noon today in the start of the 23rd annual Ne'!J'OJI:. En1en1~ yacilt race. .r-~. The anticipated field of 565 was cut ID 539 at the startiilg gun as 31 craft dropped out. Boats started streaming out of the jetty at 10:30 a.m. heading for the dual $Orting lines off the Balboa Pier. The cats went off at noon sharp with three other divisions following at JO minute lntei-vals. The first boats will start arriving In Eosenada, 125 nautical miles away early on Friday. The complete lisl entries (Including the dropouts) will be found on Page 8 oi today'1 DAILY PILOT. . ' • . Thi' fomwl J'"iantn ellglMI you'd IXpMt 10 IDlt ITHKh, mud! mort l Save on elegant triple dresser bedrooms by Lenoir House ' ' J . ' . . ' for• U.ittd ffme oatyJ 99 " ...... , ..... _ .. ltllt •lllf Ind "-19n •f Jiik • "'""1Mblt "" prl«, £Kii ... 'tlfue f INUP rncluiMe I .-., . ' tt1p1t .... ......, m1,,... ""'''*" i'-llHd•rd. Don't mlu ih11 , ';{. ~tl!•n•Hne .. 111 , SIJfl.'of, MIN T.W. SU.to ' I . . ;-:-SEE OU R PULL PAGE AD IN FAMt~ Y WE&KLY -MAY 2 ... . ' H.j ,GARRETf fU RN ITIJ ~E I PROFESSICNAL , 1l1s HARBOR BLVD INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,.. Moo.. Tllorn. & Fri. lnL COSTA MESA . CALIF. 646 ·0275 646-0276 • ' -+k , ' }\ I , t , • ' . -·· .. "' .. , ., :. . ,,. "' , " ,. '· • .-.. , I I I I . . ' ii ty, Id tit w: Id " Is ut '" m .~ •t is •n 11 Kl \, .· ir: ~! ,. d ., . . ,,, "' • .. ·' h , ' ,. .. . r I r I I I • --- cl.t.IL'Y PILot,...... IW PIWll t1t11n•1 (., DAILY~, . .. -Goldwater . . Cheer ed . ~. ., ' ' l , i.',;J,:.' j' • ::.·t At. Cal 'Staie ~ By JACK BROlsACK' . • • 1 • Of .,. Jlellt Pll1t Steff , t • , Senator u&rry , Goldwater met' • tllo: dt•ldents·"""" and more than 3,000 Cl!Cbq."f lnr.r.sted·Cal Btale Fullerto1{ abldtotiil and staff members-Wednesday. · · lbmiwere no riots,' only a few. Cl!~.Dai and lnterrupl.loos, and much a~ ' ' ' I ' Sen. GOidwater arrived on ~pul rat 12:30 p.m., a half hour late. He apologiz.ed, saying headwinds held up his plane. He spoke without notes fat; about 20 minutes and then answ«ed1 queatioM far about ~ minutes. Tbe di911denta-a'bout 20 woo gathered In the ""°' of the crowd u Goldwa~ spoke from the ·balcony of the CoU.,0 Commons dormitory ~ loudest when the .... 1or said: "From 1948 to the !ale 1950s this country entered lnto 57 mutual protection treaties and 17 of them ·call for us to go to war. At that pO!nt, be •WU lnterrupttd 11)' a raucoua~ cheer. "I don't kMw · how to Interpret lhat," be said of the ytJIJnf. FIRST GRAD ERS JOHNN IE BEHREN.DT, CAROLYN RITCHIE APPLY FINISHING TOUCHES TO DINO Goldwater continued, "We came out of World War ll wl1h a .poaltlon of world leadersh1p, whether we like it or not. School Spirit Gets Boost; .. New Cheerleaders Named By FRED SCllOEMEHL 01 n. Dlllr P1191 Stiff An impressive set of spirited (and very pretty) dleerleader11 were elected Friday amid laughter, 11miles frowns and Jots of tears at Laguna Beach High School. Patty Bryan, Margot Cather (who claim11 she may yell louder by herself than the entire Pep· Team of this year) Dru C.Omstock, Melinda McFarland, Joye Oliver, and Joy Sogawa will lead the Artists In cheers next year. For Varsity songleader, l!liSters Eileen and Glenda Acord, Linda Burrell, Karen mp, J:(atie Healy and Bobo Johns the ballot, hands down. yell leaden are seeing a revival next year. Russ Landreth and Digger Ware ran unopposed and will join the females this year in boosting spltit at ~RUNNING ALONG for mascot was Cindy Dwyer, and she'll be bouncing around along with all the others startfng in \he fall with football . But JV's -don 't . despair -your rooters have been ielected, too. Patty Armstrong, Lisa Cannon, Debbie Van Duesen, Cathy Keon, Debbie Newton, and Stella Oliver will be there to cheer J!.VJior varsity teams to victory. \.ooking at the election results,-tt looks tile spirit at the schooJ_ will be stronger thltn ever next year. With our cham- plnship football team in '68, spirit was f tastic. This year, with more of a s ess on academics rather t h a n a Jetics, spirit has not quite met the e lions of many. But next year is; "the" one, and I think a happy "lfdium will be found, bath in the c~m and on the field. -ON SPORTS notes, some .05 of the "Fabulous Forum" in ood will be dominated by students alj faculty from Laguna High, during the fourth game of the LA Lakers • Ntw York Knlcks basketball "world Mties." .fen of the 17,500 a\railable seats in tKI, Forwn wOI be occupied by Mike Scllwartz, Mike McMurray, Jennie ,· Laguna Teen Corner Oliphant, Denny Schm1U, Patty Bryan, Dave Myers, and Clifi ud Chuck Corwln, and faculty members Jerry F~lr and Bruce Morse, lb.is Friday nlgbl While they are travellng the hectic LA freeways , Jobi Breoqt;'" government instructor and adviser to the Senior Class. will be readying for I: -trip to Egypt He will be leavlng in mld-J,une. He reports that he will be teaching at the Cairo American Univenlty during the week ; on the week-ends he plan11 to do a Jot of treasure hunt.IJllg in the pyra~ds. _ Tak' heart, though, as Mr. Brenot wou)d not leave us forever. He plana to 'return for tM 1971-72 .school ~ar, after llpending this Rext year in the land of--pyram.ids, Wld, and more sand. FROM THE FAR .II ll<publlc ol Panama, we have received word from JwUor Tom Murphine. Tom left \wo Week! ago u u American Abroad frolti. the Laguna Chapter of American Field Service. He reports that surfing near tua home in Panama City ia e1cellent, with "the surf consistent at five feet and sometimes during the year it hill 20 feet." Tom has asked his family to send his surfboard to him in the central American cou11try, 8ll boards begin 1t around $15 down that way, arxl range up to 1130. "My firnily Is really cool," Tom reports. "'J;'he Spa11isb Is very difficult, especially the first day, but It doe• give everydne a good laugh." Aliso Stude nts' Science Fair Slated Saturday . "The question now be/Ort ua ii whether we-can retain that world leiderahlp.· It is a simple question, even ~you can answer IL It Is whether we want to live in a world dominated by slavery or a world dominated by freedom." Leader of the diasidents was Jlm· Cleair, chairman of the Student.Moblli;a· tion Committee at Cal State Fullerton. He had his face painted and a large With backing from such august bodies American flag painted on hill back, with as the U.S. Coast Guard, the Slate a few obscenities inscribed on his arms. Division o1 Highways, the U.S. Post SIXTH GRADER KATHAR INE SEARS DEMONSTRATES ATOM At one point, while Goldwater wy Ofifce the General Telephone Company answering question! from the audience, and the electronics flnn of Datatron Cleair tried to gain acce111 to the balc9fty. Inc., students at Laguna'l!I Aliso Elemen-1 He was held off for a Ume by student tary School will present their annual Eg pti·ans Inf 1·ct Heavy leaden . and. when he did. confront · 1eienee fair from to a.m. to I p.m. y · Goldwater be lnvlled the. aenator to 111(>- Saturday. port 1be student defense fund anil 10ld Science teacher Vance fl.1cKean Is bbn a copy of a mapzlne with nude coordinating the fair, for which every D I l • B photos of radical l~era, male and class In the school has prepared a display amage on srae I ases female. The senator paid p for. copy. following the theme, "The World on At one point diirtng the question and the Move." answer period, Bob Sandoval, atudent ~ Student displays will include a giant body president, took the microphone to papier mache dinosaur, plant ex-By United Pre11 International Jerusalem the prt!tnce of Soviet air say, ''There Js a small segment on perimenb, small car raceways, electrical Egypt said today more than IOO Eaun... force pilota In Egypt bad brought 1 this campus trying to tell the enUre experiments and a model of the Laguna °" Y-Student body what to aay and do." of the futUtt. lian troops croe.sed the Suez Canal on situation of gravity and danger and-deep Sandoval waa roundly cheered by most Displays being brought in for the a 12-mile front during the night and international anxiety. ·, of the audience •. He wu reterrlng to students include Laguna's old fire engine, lnfUcted heavy damages and casualUei Eban uid the Sovlet Union, 1by· jn-the Catcilll of the ~ during antique can, a model ol a freewty on Israel In the blgiest raid al.nee the tervening in Egypt tmlle talklnc· peiee the quUUon period. ' '1 interchange from the Division of 1987 war. Israel admitted the raid but at the United Nations with the United Here are sorne um~ questlOnl and Highways, electronic display• b y said it was repulsed by planes and States, Britain and France, bad planned Goldwatef's answers : Datatron, zip coding equipment from artillery. . "an intemallonal confidence trick" on Q. Why do we have to be a world the U.S. Post Office, a telephone in-As the 13th day of the Egyptian spring the Western Big Three. He said the leader? S'tallation van and maintenance truck Offensiv e brought the bloodiest fighting Soviet activities were of an attacking A. We got into World War 11 becaµse and a knot-tying exhibit from the Coaat In months, Israeli Foreign Minister Abba or offensive strategy and not defensive we were weak. Hitler woold never· tiave Guard. ·p;;Embamniiiimto.ldiiii~a;;;;;i;n~ew~si;;,;~co-nmremn~n~c.iiii~lniiiimmma~n~e~uv~u~s~.iiiioiiiiiiiiiiii.;;;iiiiiiiii;;,;;;iiiiiiii'~iiiirtmedm~m.-.ewmar•l•f•w•emhmadmbeeiiiiniiiiatmron;;;;i;~""'i Entertainment during the fair w1U Jn· 11 -----' --------- elude music by tbe schoOI band , folk dancing and games for tots. Submarine sandwiches and watermelon are on the .refreshment menu. The science falr 11 co-epooeored by the school and its PT A, w1th Mn. Clayton Ganison u chairman. Countian Killed In Vermont Fire Authorities in Burlington, Vt., have positively identified an Anaheim youth a.rncmg !our young persona who died when fire swept· tbelr hippie commune Jn Guilford. two weeks ago. State pathologist Dr. Lawrence Harris said Tuesday the dead have been Jden- tified as Dennis Snow, 20 of Anaheim, Regina Dougherty, 20 of Lanca!ler, Pa ., p;fJtchell McKendry and Peter Peterson, both Ii and bolh of Rochester, N.Y. GARDEN SHOP IS GOING • • • WILD! WILD! WILD! . . . ; . . \. . ...... . . . ·.. : /, ' ' '. -. -. . ' ' .. ' . . ' . ., . ' 'Vf/afc~ & J ewel"'! Jepair • ' Q OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA 'tf . AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE (i} ' ~· COMPLETE JEWE ~Y REPAIR • ,j ,d d ·-li rin gs size en re pe1re,.. • diemonds ind precious ltones remo unted e pee rls rt1,tru1tg WE CUSTOM DESIGN al t,t4NUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY EJ I HAl lOl SHOPPIN!J CENm · 2300 HAllOl II.YO. COSTA MISA 145-MH ''.The Store That Contodonce Built" HUNTlllGTON ClllTll llACH i IDIN•D HUNTIN•TON llACH Hi.1501 ' I , ' . ' '. ' . ' , , . ' -"' ' • ' . ' ,. ' ' .'• ' ' SAYE NOW ON OUR GARDEN SPECIALS ALL VAllnllS *BEDDING ·PLANTS *DECORATIVE BARK ,::..h· , 44, ,., . Pad! 144 *REDWOOD COMPOST 5 ••. h • *ORTHO LIQUID FERTILIZE'R •ALLONS ' MIX 01 MATCH *IMPORTED MEXICAN POTTERY fASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY ' NEWPORT · BEACH ~---'---- 2i499 I 1 < ' ! I . .. ... --• ··--···--.......-............. ~·= . -~ £DU.YPMT T....,,.-~ '°• 1910 Ni~o~ Task to .Calm -W a __ EscalatiQp Fear.s1 • Tiie --... ......, llld Ibo -allled mlliWJ ~ -· a -to Cambodia I plea fat ...... ocale -aid qa1mt Ibo eon,. munllt "-' lfowovV, ofllct.ail ~ .., -acbleved aplllll tllo NGllh Vletnlmele llld Vlot c.on, r ..... -ba ... Ibo -ol = the -lbo1 p08ed lo the ID --~ Premier Loo Nol, wb1cb ouated prioCo Norodom Slb-1< u cllle! ol stole. It w11 not deor whether Ibo PraldietA ln hla t PJ1L EST lelevlllce 9•"""'° --juot -ho bu cleclded lo do aboot Loo Noi'1 ur...,t requeot lor hundrlda ol mllllonl ol dollln In u .s. m!llWJ equipment lo enJarat llld outfit hll ,.i>le and dilOfganlud 11111)'. Whlle lblle News Secnlary lllmald L. Zieg~ said Nilon would "dileuu u,, enure attuadon In Cimbodia 11 It. rel ates both to C&mbodia and to the u.s. foroes In South Vietnam." Thi•" led aotne obltl'Vers to believe the Presi- dent might pe some Indication of what la lo be dooe, either .ur.ctJy or lndlrectly, to nu the Camboill111 army's needs. The United Stat.el already bas . a~ proved the ohlpment .to Cambodia by South Vietnam ol 4,000 caplurod O!inese Commuru.t...ade AKl7 automatic rifies. .. . 'lbm ... delivered i..t -k. ~·-allldlll acllllowledp4 '!lit l'l..sdeut wsa expected lo tr!llM 1bOJ • ... not at all cer111n al the the ~move ......., Ibo CambodWI 11.,.,.... o1 the ........... al a united bonier ..,.. ll1>I rlJt ..ndenlnc tho war ..,,-- anJ ~ wl1hdr1wal o1 U.S. lorceo I-lnlrlt proclolmed It I meet- but,' oo tbe cootl'1ry, wu neceolll')I ·' Ing eat°'1' this week ol North to mab cerwn tbe withdr1wall COllld., Vjllnomete, Communlat P1thet Lio llld cooUnue unmolesl<d. • Viet C.00, r~ves wldl Sthlnoul<. The Americ•·supporiod South 'Viet-'lbll .. _ summit" bellevod to ........, drive came u a lhock lo -hJvt been held In NIMl(>r, l!olill Cllfnl, Coqmsmen, who hid ll&lllMd Nlioo '!ti ~ to bave been ~Uy would want lo 1Vold 111y U.S. lnlerftlltloa coogr11'11al<d by Communbt ~ In Clmbodla -even In the combat«IP' PftmJer Chou En Lal. II a1lo wu Ibo oortlnl role.-leJt Hanoi. be l""1'nd ·~ ol a llowinc -ol ap. lo lni8llilled olfo<ta throughout pn>val from Soviet Premier Alad N., Indochina. Kosygin. No Comment By Kopechnes _ On Testimony N. Viets Rap U.S. Cambodia Mov~" I~_. .. ~ 1'0111 "'"! · Mn. Ada H1llewell of Chatham, Eniiand has put a •i(D on her J.5. month-otd baby's highchair saying, "Do Not Feed Mo Goldfish." The •I~ ,..,t up ~r th~ fatt)ily's JO!dflSh, Perly, c11.. ared from Jts bowl near the ~nt's chair. "He bad a RUi]ty look," said Mrs. Hallewell, ''lllte he bad swallowed a fil:b." • Greg JOMI, 10, hli li&kr Connie, 1, and migihbor Trocv Peter&on, JO, aU of Tejon, Calif., north of Gorman. take fulL adocmtage of the unseaso'nat apring mow that feU in their front uard and all over tht: Gorman area recently. The freak weather closed major arterial highwat1s for &ev eral hours. • Dougl11 Dodds-Parker, a mem· ber of British Parliament, has ask- ed the Defense Ministry if marks· men from the Guards Regiment in London can be authorized to aid the City of Westminster's antipig- eon campaign. • A Volk1tOOgen bus is parked In the liuing room of a 23rd fl oor dormitory auite on the Ohio State University campus. School offi· cial&, contending the engineLess vehicle ii a fire hatard, havt or- dered ft removed. The 1tUdcnt1 bo"flhl lh• 1961 modd bua /rqm a ;unk1,lord for $16, di.sasatmbltd. It and moved it piece-.bu·piece up dormitM"JI elevators during the toee hours one morning last tttek. •SWELEY HEIGIITS, N.J. (AP) - The parents ol Mary Jo Kopechne oay they will, defer COIDmelll m an Inquest re,...i ,roleased In Booton unW they reld it 1rith a lawyer. ·Tiie Kopechnel said Wedneaday alght they ~ 10 lo _ Wl!Uf Sam,_ Pa. to conault with attorney Jo • e p h Ftan.taan, who · hu repre1ented them In the cue. Mlsl Kopechne wu born in Wilkes Barre and WU buried there 1aa1 ........ Flanagan, who wu IUOOeSBful In preventiog Olhum1tloa ol Mary Jo'• body for an autopsy lite lul' year, aald, "I have ordered a copy d the inquest report and tran!ICrlpt and will have no comment at least unW after I have read Jt thoroughly." Flanagan al~ ts representing the parents iR 4 civil action agaiast Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and ltiJ Insurance finn in connection with the auto death. The amount of damages sought has not been dbclosed. Flanagaa declined commeat on what ~ect the Inquest testimony might hav• on the lawsuit. · Mrs. Kopechne said on April 10 "it was an accident, there's no doubt about jt" when commenting on a grand jury sessioa which f~iled to find a111y cause for criminal act.ion against Kennedy. She Aid at thlt Ume that both she and her husbaOO looted forward to teeing the tralllCript. Mrs. Kopeclme said Kennedy had call· ed her that week to inquire .. how we were doing!' She said Keimedy "had the habit" of calling her during the past several months to make similar lnqulrl ... PARIS (UPI) -North Vlelnlm ac- CUled Ibo United Slateo lodly or -plying material to Cambodia's n e w regime lo help mauacre . Vletoam- and Chinese mlclenla -tbe lint menUoo or Chinese dealhs In Cambodl1. Nguyen Minh Vy, Norlll Vlelnlme .. represeotaUve to the Vietnam peace talk6 accused the Unil<d Slatea ol e11end- lng the war to all of Indochina by providing support for Soulll Vietnamese troops operaUng Inside Cambodi1 and added : "This is not to menUon the fact that since It staged the coup In Phnom Penh, Storm Ravages . O.klahoma Area; 41 Persons. Hurt OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -Tornadic wind11, hail, torrential rain and one roving twister battered homes, school s, shops and churches early today, turning streets • Into fivers and scattering, can, roofs and Utter. At least 41 persons were Injured by the storm that struck the city for fi ve houn before daybreak. Almost four in· ches ol rain flooded streell. The storm tore roofs off houses. knock· ed down power lines and left much of Oklahoma's largest city without lights, gas or telephone service. More than 100 blocb were .damaged along the fashl001ble Quail Creek and Camelot residential sections. One twister skirted town, spreading damage and destruction. A small cam- ·plng trailer was thrown into one man's living room. Burglar alarms walled all across town. Dozens of streets were blocked by fallen trees and debris. Among the injured was the Rev. David Monallsn, principal at Blohop McGulnn<s High School, which was damaged by the screeching winds. He was treated for cuts and bruiles at a hospital. Nympho Colle~1s Cable Car Girl Gets $50,000 SAN FRANCISCO (UP I) - A buxom ex-Sunday school teacher has been awarded $50,000 da mages !rom a cable car accident her attorney said led her into the anns of 100 men . The eight women and four male jurors deliberated for eight hours before deciding Wednesday on the amount for Gloria Sykes, 29, In her sult against the city and its transit sy stem. Two of the jurors held out for a $300,000 verdict aod the final vote was >J. She had sought $500,000, but' attorney Marvin Lewis sUll hailed the verdict as a "legal breakthrough" which established the principal of . "psychic damages." But he said Miss Sykes would need $150,090 worth of psychiatric treatment in the oezt five years and indicated he might appeal the amount ot the award. ri.1iss Sykes was on a Hyde Street Cable car in 1964 when it broke loose, plunged down a hill and smashed into a power pole. During her 21h: days on the stand, she told of a craving after , the accident, for cuddling and "emotional vibrations'' -most easily obtainable throu gh sex. "l wanted them to jmpart to me some of their strength," she testified of her 100 recent lovers. "By being close to someone, you receive emotional sustenance." She also testWed she bad a sheltered upbr inging, taught Sunday school and sang in her home town choir In Dearborn Heights, Mich. She said her college friends used to kid her about being "the world's only 21-year-old virgin." Thunderstorms Spre,ad · Violent Weather Boils Up in Summertime ·Heat Al"'-"iut ,_,," A!ltftlf &allt rif'91d Bl!mtr<t l olM ·~ ... ll'OWiUY!ll• "' .. " C!flc1""'" .... ~. Dl1 MolMS """'' 1'11 ....... l'crtWwlfl .. _ ...... ....... Kt-ICltY lfl ..,... ·~­M•"" ----H .... YOtll Noftll l'l11tf "''"" OllW.,.._Clrr ........ Ptlm s..,1,.., -·-,_,. l'!ftMllr'tt! l'Ol'lll "'ll ll1111d(l"f lltd 911111 ·-SK•l mtflle S.H ll~f CtlV s ... 01- S1n F•1ndtt0 S..ttl• $fOl\t .... T"'9l'Tl'ltl W1~ron .. . . " .. . n " 4t ll u 4J T .. . " n as '° '·" .. .. .1' " " ., 5' .~ " " . " " n n • n • .. . " " ... .. . .. " " " ... -• 1• "l' " . " a ... ,. " '·" .. . " .. n " n ,, " " '° " ,,, " " IS IJ • • n q ... u .11 .. ., " . ., "5 .ti " . . ~ ... the Nl100 Admlnlttratlon his stealthlly Ofllniud 1lle lllj)ply ol munitio111 and other mllltary malerlel lo the Lon Nol· · Slrik Malak cllqqe lo m.....,... tbe Cam- bodian people , and Vietnamese .,Ind Cline" residents In Cambodia and allo not to mention 1he ;almoet daily violaUoa or the territory or Clmbodia by u.s. ly the target al lhe coup that led lo the overthrow ol Prince Norodom SJhanook as C~lan chief of 1 t at e March 11. the Cambodian fl&Wnl llld In· tematlOoal repercuas1---eel the , .. In Vietnam Ii.ell and _..uy )>O'hed tbe IS.monlll.old Porll peoce ta.lb to a new low, and Saigon troops. , · "Thb is a new, extmnely zerlous escalation of the Ni.Ion AdministraUon in Cambodia." Hanoi and tbe Viet Cong warned Jn aharply worded stalemenla that 1be United States henceforth will be C<lfl· fronted by a United front ol leftist Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian forces. "We severely condemn and denounce ' the new and ~y grave atep (If the Unlted Statea In.'~ " llaDol's delegate, Nguyen Minll'Vy, iJld. Vy's . statement was the first time the Vietnamese Communist.1 had men- tioned CJtlnese residents as being alleged- The attack on President Nixon's ded!ion to provide support to SaJaon's units that crossed the Cambodian froritier came at today's 6Mh weeltly session of the Vietnamese peace conference. "'lbe Unil<d Slates hla carried' the war in lndodl ina one step ftl'Ward by giving orders IDd C>penly llllPPOrtinl the South VietnlIDe3e military ~ on Cambodian soil," the Hanoi diplomat said. SHOP SEARS SUNDAYS 12 Noon to 5 P.M. ~ ~;·";·.,:·; ::. ,:»:, a. ·~- Sears Sean·Aluminnm Frame Sturdy Screen Door Low Priced! 88 •· Fiberdas• &Cl'eening ••• kick Plate for addeill p~teqion . _ , 11 '•Low, low priee yet fully faDCtiftal! • Fiberglas• ICret:ning for mwm .. ventilation · • Complete with 1pring cloeer. bancDe and hook and eye latch • Siaet 32x00.incbee end 36x80.mehe. Better Mill.finish Screen Doon i• olaeo 32x80-ia. and 36x80-ia..9.99 b.Re~$16.99 Screen: Door SAVE S2! 14ssr e Grey Fibeqlaa• ,.... • .nib I ..... bar, air closer •Tulip latch wilh locking action • 1~inch kickplate • Si&es 32xSO.incbes end ~ 1 123.99 Anodloed Extraded Aluminum. Sereen Doon 32x80°inche111 S6x80.inelaa....20.ll c. $32.99 White Extrnded Aluminum Screen Door SA\E $., •• 2788 •Charcoal Fibergl1111• eerecnin1 with 2 white pu1h ban • Black pu1h button latch wilh Jocking button. JO" k.ickplate • Si.ze1 32:x8().incb and 36x80-ineh • White, baked enamel fini1b Sears 3-in -1 Deluxe Asphalt Shingl es • Tb"e 'obingl., an rated llt ~Ibo. per 100 sq. ri. ••• and that meant they're lougb •They •re COYtred with 1()1)9li pare as· phalt that makes them thicker •nd 111ronge1". Guaranteed'f or 18 yeai-1. Phone Seart for free c1tim1te 18-Yeu lmlalled Deluxe Aopbalt Shlnale Roof Guarantee Wbea in.r.rallation i1 artatWtd thn;iup Scan. if roof leak &houJd d~~ btt:.usc o/ U J d~fea iD shio-ila or worluN.mhip w:ilhio 7 ~of "l'Plit*ioa, -will ttp&ir or replace,• our optioa. (tH. P1y rqu.1.-('llmftt p.-ic-e for Judi. rcpeirorftP~ dw-it11 aut II fttn.tubtr.c:ciq l/2t6dl of priCT fOI" ~Kb month relMinine:oapanmtt . SA V1: 20%1 70 Sq. FL Roll • 15 01.0 .... ?.!f .. -/( 1.....wa-.· Fiberglu lnmlation ' RegulsrS5.291Roll 4~ ... u • Helpt1 lower your be1ting.coolinghillt • J..lneh thick -.ph1lted paper aell 11 1 • .-apor .banier in yoar w1ll1 •Solid in compreaeed, ea1y to handle roU. SS.99 ""Foll-Faced" lni uladon-4.66 ..... Sears :.!-::.!•.:. .. ,:: ..... 1.. :.,: : = • _, :;... .u:,.::;'~n :=:; =:.::••• ___ , __ ---·-· __ ,.. ...... _ .. ,.... l lAlltri-""1C11.AlfOCO. -· -·M ii --et .. 1111 ... _ 11<11-1111, Hl.nO -·" ---1 'lr.IU'< ... -I I, -.., .................. .....,tl-M ....... fM ........... :a ..... , •• , ........ ~ ................ ,_ .... , ..... -·"""'' ' .. .i he eel ol· t h nd 1k. lo ... lly .. ... IP-N., ln- ec1 ~y ce .. of I" he by he on •t ' . • • San -Clemenie ·-. v -. VO L 63, NO. 103, 3 SECTiONS. '44 'PAGES I o 1 f ,... . , ORANGE• COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JHURSOAY., APRIL 30, 1970 I . ' Solon Still Opposes Mitchell; Chances Slim By RICllAJUl P. NAU. Of' .. Dlltr ,.. s-.tt SACRAMEN'!O -State Senator Alfred E. Alquist (D-Sao Jose), today vowed to try 'and block the appointment of ~uth Lagunan .Clay N. Mitchell lo the State Board of Education. "I will oppose Mr. Mitchell's ap.. pointment on the Senate floor, not -because of his reactionary politics but because of Jtis dismal record of ptrf<>n?ance on the Orange County school board,'' 5ald Alqulst. And · Blthoogh Alqulst would only need 14 votes to accotnpllsh the task, his chances of success seemed doubUul. It takes a two.thirds vOte, 27 senators, of the 40-member Senate to confirm the governor's appointment. tt has been rare in the past for the senate to turn down a gubernatorial appointment or even for senators to spend as much time with it as they have already put in on Mitchell. Normally the -senate.has taken the at· Utude it ~ a gubemat~la1 prerogative and problem. · Alquist~ who ·.ls a ·candidate for Ueulenint> governor ,1 said of MttChell, "The unrefuted evidence shOws he simply does not meet the qualifications for this important 'statewide office. "I think the &enate's rejection or Mitchell's appointment will )lave Go'(. Reagan. ' arut 'dt:al of future em- barrassmeDl." • Republican IOU.rces have stated that Rea1an appointed the arch~rv•U~e Mitchell af the strong urging of Max Rafferty, stat&-superintendent of public' instruction. J Mitchell, 51, 11 S. Alta Mira. Road, a retired food broker and financial ad- viser, was not availablf' today to com. . ment on the Alqulst statemeJts. Mitchell Wednesday W<ln a 4 to 1 endorsement by the powerful Senate Rules 0>mmittee which can talte tho matter to the noor of the 'upper bouse when it clX>Oles, poaibly next weet if lht votea are nailed ·down for Mltchell. Alqulst Bldes said toda y thet the senator has four sure ~otea -catnst Mltcbeli llOd another five In lhe }>robabte area. One of the votes agalnlt Ml~U b likely tbll ol Sen. Stephen P. Teale. (f>.West Point), a member ol tile niles committee and the IOle no . vote Wed- nesday. um1n ver Wi¢h U.S. Help Viets Hit Deep Into Camho·dia SAIGON (UPI) -Four lank·led South Vietnamest task forces estimated at 9,000 · men drove deep into Cambodia today with U.S. air support, and tbeir commander announced they would re- main "for many days" to trap and destroy. thousands -of Comm"unist troops in their~'-'*"• . , The 'matli'lllinWl 0..-i lltlhwa1 ·t 1eadinf ' from Saiion 1 tO Phnom Penh overr'° t.be Cahlbcidian towns of Chipou and Plasautt. 25 miles inside Cambodia, and wu pushing westward tow&rds Cam- ' tiodian troops based at Svay Rieng , 40 miles inside Cambodia and 7tl air miles from Pbnom Penh. Three task forces estimated at 2,500 each drove into Cambodia in the Parrot's Beak sector whi ch juts into South Viet- nam to within 35 miles of Sai.gon. A fourth task force of 1,500 pushed across the border from the Mekong Della town of Kieng Tuong to try to cut off 15,000 Viet Cong in the area. So far the South Vietnamese report. killing 445 Viet Cong and North Viet- n@mese troops and capturing vast .sup- plies of equipment at • loss or 32 killed and 112 wounded. 55 of the wounded strafed by mistake by U.S. helicopter gunships. Two U.S. advisers were reported wounded. Although a Cambodian spokesman in Phnom Penh said his government could not approve the allied operation, since It violated Cambodian neutrality, front dispatches said the operation was coordinated with the Cambodian anny to the ei:tent a dozen Cambodians linked up with the advancing Vietnamese forces 1s, guides. fhe first officially acknowledged drive Into Cambodia by South Vietnamese troops bad the official purpose of destroy· inc Viet Cong and North Vietnamese bue camps near the border. But as ttie Connnunists fled from the alli!! -some in commandetred cars -the KOpe of the action was extended. Lt. Gen. Do Cao Tri said h~ was extending the oPeraUon because: "We will need many days to search the area thoroughly . We will try to control the area, to trap ijlem inside and destroy theni." He said three brigades of South Viet· namese troops were Involved in the push alon1 Highway L Newly structured South Orpge Weatlier Sinshlne ls the order of the day for )'rlday, with temperaturts In the Ahllnmertng .70'1 along the coast and up lo • siizllng 80 de-crees further inland. INSlllll TODi\l' The "cable car named desire'' rolled up to a $50,000 fXl.1/0ff for the oirl who lost more than her heart in San Frandaco, Set Page 4. C1Hf9nt.. t Mnle tt-ft Clllettlllt u, 1 flWhltil ,,,.,. JI C..1tlfllll M-41 ....... "-... (Mllltl ti ~ ..... C-ty II ,,........, fl tYMt ._.... n °""' Mltlc.. 11 .,...,. »·• .r:flttrlll ,.,. & Sfldl Mlf1lttl Jl·H •.+tr111M11111 n.n t....,.._ n ""'"'" JI.ft ,.....,..,. 2'·11 ....-.~ 14 Wt.ilHlr 4 Allll Ll"'ert 11 Wt-•1 Ht'" llo1 f \ I Vietnamese brigades total about 80 per· cent of an American army brigade of 4,500 men, but military sources In Saigon said Tri's forces totaled about 7,500 men. Russell saJd American advisers were visible 41Jopg the roote, ha~ing radio ~ommunicaUol'ls and . P,lotting rq a· p. Coordinates. '"'-e !also 1f'@M a num~r Ol 'IG/een' ~ 1iltii',ilttiil'tt.\bocl"" · mercenary croasli1 ft181-i.a-;,~ usea . apinst the. Viet Cone Jl\11' the Mekon1 Delta regie11 for )'elrL-• . . ~ Ted Kennedy Says Ruling Not Justified • BOSTON (UPI) -Judge Jame.s A, Boyle, refuting sworn testimony by Edward M. KCJ1aedy, says l he Massachusetts se_nator was taking Mary Jo Kopechne down a road tha t ltd onlt to a secluded• beach the night she drown. ed. Ke'lnedy says he had been taking Miss Kopechne back to drop her off at her motel. He rejected "the inferences and ultimate fh1ding of the jud1e's report" as not "jusUfied." Boyle, in his findings on the celebrated case, said Kennedy probably was driviJtg ne1ligenUy. He left open the matter of whether criminal charges ml1ht be pressed -.alUiou&h further action ap- peared unlikely. ~tiss Kopechne, 28, a former secretary for Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, drowned when Kennedy's auto went off • brid1e at Cha ppaquiddick Island, Maas., the night of July 18, 1969. The testimony and Boyle's findin1s at the inquest in Edgartt'lwn from Jan. 5-8 were made public Wedaesday. Kennedy, In his testimony, said he was taking Miss Kopechne ba'ck to her mo~I room In F..dgartown when he made a wrong turn and went 7/loths of a mile down the wroag road -the road that led across a wooden bridge spanning a tidal pond. The auto, with Kennedy at tbe wheel, went off the bridge and landed upside dowa in the pond, dronlng the girl. Boyle noted several points that came out In the test1mony lo back hla feeling Kennedy and Mia Kopeclme did not (See ltOl'SCBNE, Pore I) Runoff Slated At Viejo Higli A l'UIH)ff election ~ay for vice pre.ti. dent of Minton Viejo High School's associated student body will round out the cast of new student oUJcera:. The runorf. is between candidalet Greg. Hebets and Ray Delgatto. Ndther received • majority in the Wednesday elect.ion. Other new offictrs are_Donua ConJlly, president; Pam btvis, secretary; Jefr Mastel"90n, trt1surer; Thelma Giddens, activities coordinator; Steve Ashcraft, publicity chalnnan; Sue Schaeffer, ~p commissioner ; Hans Duncan, senior representative ; Andre Holmes, junior representative : and Bob Fer au so n, t0phomore representative. i_ ... ' ' ,. ) . , , DAILY "IL.111 14.ff ....... POSTER PUSHES RALLY, COVERS SHATTERE;D WINl:!OW .. · In Oc11nsid1, A Sign With a Du•I ' Purpose . · , : . . . . ' t •• ' ' Orange Coast Architect Wages War on U gline~s By PAMELA HAU.AN Of flll Oellr •1i.t Ill" Ronald Yeo, , "the Ralph Nader ·of Orm1ge Coast beautification," Wednesda y brought his fight against ugliness lo the Capistrano Bay League ol Women Voters. Through a series of slides, the architect a1.d conservationist. showed the group what they shoukl be noticing and how to 1et rid of what they don't like. ••you have an opportunity here In this area to learn from the mistakes other communities have made," said Yeo. "Ten years ago, Garden Grove had an opportunity to learn from the mistakes Los Angeles made but il didn 't," He· told them he was wa1ing a war against ugliness and asked tllem to help by lookin1 arowld the next time they drive dawn the stre~. , "A majority of our problems have sprung up around tramportaUon, said Yeo flashing a picture of a freeWfY on the screen. "The automobih; has created storatc. maintenance and refuelln1 problems." He then showed a teMes of pictures of cluttered, sign-p'ged functlohail gas stitlons. "You can do something about this.'' said the Corona del Mar man. "The next time You pay your credit card bill enc.kite. a letter l.o the conipa~y complalntng about ijle ugliness." He then ahioWed a aer.ies of Imaginatively design- ST9CK MARKET ed gas stations with plantf!rS fµll of trees, the result .of 1om'e,bod y's beautillcatlori acmpaJgn. · He' aswred the group •that individuals can do somf:thlng to beaUtify sur- roundings even when it means flghtln1 giant corporatloils. · ''The war · on utility poles Is a good example," he said. "People began realiz.. in~ t.!.11Jt utility polesa re a blight on (See BEAUTY, Pa1e Z) Planes Overfly Nixon's Home Private planea are penelrating • the air security sumundlng Presi- dent Nixon's Wester11 White House. In a p~ release,· Aft<ln Q, Basnight, director of ';.-lhe F,ederal Aviation Agency's n i ·n e~s.t at 'e western rer,ion , reported that since notice of the prohibited area, for the President'~ safety, w~s matle public last fall thert have been numerous vlolaUons. "Seyere penalties, i o c I u d i n g . suspension' Of pilot lice~. 'have been· and are being .. assessed agaiNit theae violators,'' •said . Basni1ht., "We ask the cooperaJJon Of · all pilot.! flying In the vicinity of the Summer ·White •HOOJei . to a•okl· the prohibited are~ eind belp iMure fhe President's protecUon'and life- NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market (y." · •. · - continued-Its-downward drift t~a-arter--1-~the prohlb/llon ~ls .JO elfttt at noon after -an early monlng rally failed all times, not just when the Presl· lo gain supPGrt: Tradtng was slow. 1See denl Is In reside.~. he stated. quotaUom, Pages 32-Jl). . The airs-pace sccunty area hu. Declines outnumberM ·arivancts bv a a . radius of about ooe nauHcal sm111! margin. Earlier, advsnces had bee~ mile. ahead by tlmost four to one. • Gro~p ·Vows To Be Ready 'Next Ti1ne' By JOHN VAL TE~ZA OI fllt ~IY ,._ l tt ll "They all call ua a violent or1anlzatlon, but we don't go arouitd spraying machine IURS Into people 's houses," Paul said, &•zing ·It bullet boles in the buff shlcco h\>Pse .in Oceanside. 'Ille yotltb, wearing bushy sldebur~. ft'lziy hafr· and a but!on With Che , Guf 1r1'' :J:rtrait. 'in, ~:, andr ~laCk • :~····~~~I; 1 td Ourselves ~•l'tt~" · ·' r 'nio·fil'll 'ttiDe occulroil'.,;.t m~t . 'IWsdty ·Wtieft th".ef , meft• d'oft lil;'frOrit "i tHe headquj.rters of the Movel1*1t ftr a Dem(>C!ratic Military · (MDM) 'arid ojlehed ui:i' wfth a machine eun . 'J'he burst o! a dozen slugs ripped ttirough the front of the residence and one shot hit a Marine before he could hJt the floor ., "It hit brother Jesse (Woodward) In tbe arm, then went into his chest. The slug stopped about an inch 'from his heart," Paul explained. Woodward,· police 1aJd, wis a Marh1e Corps . deserter. He ls rtrovering after surgery 'at the U.S. Nlval HO!pitAI. ·Other bullel! lodged Into walls and ripped through posters h a n g I n g thrOU1hoUt .the house. One slug first went through the back of Eldridge Cleaver's head In one poster, then passed lhrQugh a poster showing a clenched fist holding ·a rltle complete with a slogan about annin1 oneself by Bobby Seale, then whizzed past four Inhabitants of the house, fMally to ·stop in ,1 far wall. Jt hit a poster pholo of Che Guevara In the left cheek before.finally·alopplng. Leads lo the Identity of the vigilantes -witnesses sa14 they were three in nu1 .• ber -number zero. Oceariside police, who say the case (See SHOOTING, Pa1e I) P«:>tter y Shack May Get Pole Sign A'f ter All Tl appears · that Roy Childs, oft.ner of Laguna's colorful Potter,. Shack, Will be able tp put Up a conrormtbg sign on his par~ng lot without erecting ·a building to support It. Seeking to replace a larae, e1l!tlng · pole sjgn l®oJi(ying the lot wilh a smaller more artistic carved wood sign, Childs discovered that the new sign ordinance requires sjgna in R-3 zones be att.8.ched to buildings. Polrlting out that the parking lot was not equipped with a building, Childs applied for a variance to permit the pole sign. . ' The: matter was further complicated when reading of local codes indicated. par:kjng:_ Jots in R.-l. zones could !;le permit.- led ohij' under condlUorial use permits, which also lake care of signing. · · · There wereft't any conditional use permits when ·he put in the parking lo~ Chilli •xplained. · Planners. agreed that rezonlna WO\lld IOlve the whole problem, but this seemed unduly compiei for such a rmall matter and, •• ,..,y, monlng Jl!Obably llhould await completion Of·lhe 1eneral p1ao. This week, commlsslone.r, leariled the city attorney had ruled out cond!Uonal ~e permit procedure and Jndlcated that the v•rl11nCe Olild11 originally rcqutsted probably would do the lrl1'<. Th~ com· mission wlll act on the request at lta rogular Monday meetJni. • • • Alter· 4J9u1111 lnterrorated MltdioD1'11h pe-of lhe rules ""'11Dl11oe, 'l'elte toot over and asked MltcbeU ·to outline the luncUons of tile Staie Board .t EducaUon. Mile~ said It should strive to de...., the bell educational syotem PoQible lot youngsters. -· Mltdlell, who calla for a ~ti> lhe ba6lc prlndptes of educ1fton, "1d he dooo-not _. change IM· "Is 1 • lllee ~ ! ... "I) -.:..: • -:; 1 ...... < ~· -- c Student Leader · Denies Chqrges By Couricilm.an 1-8i>!n• Beach. Hlglr School · &tudent Body President Howard HiUs .Ulla weet denfed City Councllrha n EC!ward 'Lon's ~harge that ·students had 1• ·p~r.tlcipated in. the tax override elec~on campailfl with the encoura1ement of the• IChool board. Lorr recently accused the . board or "playing on the emotions ol the voteU" by using student.! to ~mpaign 10r ihe · tax. "School .Board President Larry TaytOr specifically denied the ·charge, !polnUna out that Inquiring · st~ents had · been lnfom1ed the board could not us~· them for such aaUvlty. In an Aptil· 2.8 letter addreued to Lorr as president of the Laiuna Beach Taxpayers' ASSOclaUon, and today re.leu.- ed to the press, Hills wrote : "As president of the Laguna Beach H11h· School Student • Body., .J '.am dlsm.ayed about .your recent ·reproach of our school board. While Jt is ,not my h1tenUon to deny that the vast ma- jority of student.! arxl teachers naturally fa vored the Issue, It is ·completely fallacious to imply . that any pceuure was brought to bear ..• to enlist sludt.ot support.'' Student.! who did support \be ICboolr said Hills, did so under the protecliori of the U.S. CoMUtutlon. Bahe Ruth Ball Tryouts · Slated . La11ina Beach area boys a1«1 JI throogh IS are ln•lted to partlc:leate in t~e ·annual Babe Ruth beague' ~tt stheduled from 9 a.m. to noon at the high school baseball field Saturday, Mil' 2 and agai n on Saturdlfy, May 9. , League play wUI begin June 15. "'We hope for-a 1ood tumout1" • aakl •. Mn. .rr"eph SWeany, '1so we can tiave 111 teams. We expect at iea~ enougti ~· for five-teams, but m would be"tldttr. ParUclpants should take ·lhe.ir birth certlflcafes, S3 re1l&trltkm fee and 1 mitt, if they have one, to the tryouts. • Those eligible are boys who will, be 13 by Au11. I and not more • than ll by that da te . Further Information may be obtained by ca llln& Mr1. Sweany at ~. ' • .. ' ' I -· -_.., __ I . • • -. . • _1 "-;7":;"/•"': ~~ -• .___.---z ,., I -. ~ . ·-..... .,_ . .,..... . .. ... 'NQ Long Term Move' . Nixort .. Assure·s Solons ~ • Poi-, --#' • • " · · · ~Ql'Oll • M'll -Tbe White la lgncie them ••would Jll'O""t an open ..,,. lldtllllf. _.ct key con-'American flank <o tht enemy." grmillOn !OllJl-'lhat Pmidtnl ·Nixon · -"This is, nor a Jong-term 'quickslnd' • does not ~ (0 lnv:.m ·the United operaUon !hat would lead (0 a new llA!Oi lln. '1 1!10iiiiiino • :eiiand opera-'Vietnam 1llUaU0n' In Camb'odfa,:• 'the Uoa" !D ~-.., _ . • ktter ,lfld, ::,Jt is a s~j)e_o~U!>n But the,lllli'lgn,d sta eol di;culateci !hat is an Integral part of our opera1">iis on Capt<ol HW said !he President found In Vietnam: II Is nol In reply to any t tt ~·tp •send adviJara and anps of (CambOdiB Premier)1LOa 'NoJ'a, ~&t ln'.oj CambOdla-from. Vlei"'!" "<o .... ~for old Iii Cambodll." -' Amtrican Uvei." ' 4-Ncjtiq; iihat-t4S8.igon ii onJY • rid1et :". ~ me~-c\i'<li!•W :in rt..n , i:IQl"9dla','' the . ~1pnen1. lild .advance of fi Preti.deJil's s~ to 11 "lbil .effort to clean out the enemy · the ution tonight in which be will seek · wllJ ftsult in a saving of American -to allay fears· that the .allied , thruit lives.11 • fn(O Cambodia may .widen ·tba war ltt "Only ihe Presldent·has ·all the facls sou~ A~. , . ,. . , : pn t.bis1Siluafion, •1 the ·White ~.memo Tile memo said !hat Conu)>.-1H-, said. '.'Be mllSt act tn what he.c'l"'iders have uenonnoualy .. ~',' their to be .the belt lltere§ti of OUft coUntry hootlle ~vitlel · In ~ lllCI ,that · ape! our troops." J'ntli :· ~ .. e l SHOOTING .• : •.• ·:: • -.. The letter. wrlttat" on White House stationery. sat ll ~unlst activiiy in €ambodlan sanetuarle:s were lgnqred it would "jeopardize lbe enUre SOI.lb. Vietilamese OR!flUoP" ~ .. affect OUr · ability.to continue our withdrawal" Earlier a Republican seftator predicted tl\at on the basis of a talk with Defense Secrelary Molvin R. Lalnl that N"""\'l ,. use ol American forces "Would be Gd~ •la very limited bUls."J -.._.:._ :-.. Sen. Rilbert J. Dole (Ji.Km.) sa!f he dlscuSSed tlie situation With talid Wednesday night. • ,. Dole said of U.S. involvement : "As I understand ·it, we're talklag about a two, thTee or.· four w~k period. The~ · there's the beginning of. the rainy season.· and everything will bog down. But it's ~ going to be tough fs>r 'a few weeks." · - · .. ·. Frona Page • l ··- BEAUTY .•• Claeerlul Cheerleaders lJi totally theirs, not the Marine COrps', others ts the neighborhood where the said they have dl:awn a blank on clues. MOM house -bought y. month ago the landscape and they began com-,. plaining very loud. Now they're certainly l"' not'. all ·remqved but there are treas where uUlitles have been put un-- derground." He showed 1 9ectlon of'· Cout • ffilbway In Newport Beach lull of sigM .and utility poles., '1be1 call · this a scenic highway,'' he sald. · • These· smiling young ladies.will lead the <:heers for er. StaftailiB~(fromleft) ar<•,Joyce Oliver and .Patty Laguna Bea~ Hiih School' varsity athletic teams Bryan. 1A s~1 Kiri on the cheerleading sqUad, Dru . "We don't have a car. a ~ption and "warmed on1y lut'weekend bf *'>- of subject.s .•• nothing bUt a doien,sPent tress Jane Fonda" -l!es. 7 1 ~=g next fall. Girls ·are · (seated from left) .. Coll!Stock ,dldn t inaie it· for the photo, . McFarland, Joy Sogawa and Margot Oath·· cartridgea.flom a w,eapoo.".ooe detectlve "We . hive· eome pJ'et.ly reactlon!'T. aaid W~ead.ly aftenioon: ; ~ne pWrs,~ Paut said )as lie bunkeref! The ll!"'UP al a dozen«1r so memben ·on the f'll"t lawn; · · I Iii • ' ~ ' -., • f . · of the ~-.!In1 :the ~use at A~t .: . "'Tliey ·lrl.~almbst all ot~·peopte w1't the ~ t~ ·~ever, .aay that,_ their-... llave'1Ud .. 'PiJd 1off ... the 'riiortga&e· atjl ' Wilcoxen Raps Schmitz In Mission Viejo Talk ass~ts ar~ !tfannes. . are obviously scared to death. 1 The group• allegations come from "We have a couple of long-haired their o~viously unpopular causes on the neighbors next door, but that's allj" sprawling Camp P~leton M.arlne base he-added ... -·" _ _ . _ _ _ -ll!"poputar among . the officers, but Obviously the. neighbors have a rlg}lt lit.lie criticll al !ht ~ tha! 8l'O'l!lDI in popularity -I b ~ to !heir fear. ; goes on." "peons/' one MOM membet claims. A dozen bullets pointed ihat out the He cited ,a lituati9n 1n wbicb -~·.ado-Race riots on the , base last ·Feb. 11 other nigbt , and now that the victims minbtrator hmovated a program . were-blamed by .the Marlpes on the have armed theniselves and set up From Page J MITCHELL ... He advised the group to continue th1S .. campaign and to fight for the planting of trees along streets. - "Scenic El Toro Road is one example ' or a highway that is rapidly losing itt, .... trees. Get out and protest," he said. ' ~' Yeo then focused his attack on street >-- furniture singling out roadside benc&e. with tbelr billboard like messa~ andp - the rows and rows of newspaper vending ~ machines. : · Human aewage l! polluting Orange CoubO'· ... -and .ver.bal rewage is pollullnt Orange Coonly's atmoophere In Ille .raee for U.S. Co118'"S'. candidate Wllllam Wllcoen charged Tuetday ·1n ~V1"jo. The 37·i'elr-<>ld taguna Beech atlorney spoke before cltlum at Mlssloo Viejo High School, hltllng• 1 variety of topics in a question~·r · 11ession af- terward.;· . He swung at Congreslilonal candidate state Sen. John G. ·Schmitz (fl.Tustin) In the' ,flnt ·round of ·,the night while toucldog .other matters in relation to hi•~ .. we-;;;t 'llee(f representation 'that ls Ued to-!nhlNted Ideologies,•• remarked !ht GOP candldlle who ~ llimr.ll a a:cwiei +aUYe. '' . \ 1 ,. 'J,• '"We have.very real pfubtems to solve, he 'addid, Charging !hat his opponent in the rice -to rtplaCe the late Congmmnan James B. Utt CR-Tustin) hasn't concerned himself with them. Discussing public property use, Wilcox- en cited his own Sa..,e Salt Creek carn- paigo • llJC! pral&ed Orange ~ --<- Dog Obedience Classes Slated Dog owners atiU may register for a novice dog obedience class beginning Mllf 5, LagWll Beach Recreation Depart- ment director George Fowler said today. Fee for the nine-week course is $20 and enrolhnent will be limited to the first 20 persons to sign up at the Recrea - tion Department office, 175 N. Coast Highway, in the old Boys' Club building. Classes will be held from 7 to 8 . p.m. on Tuesday JUghU on the basketball courts adjacent to the building on the Main Beach. Instruct« will be Jackie Niles, licensed American Kennel ~ Club · h~ and trainer. Dop must be at least · three .months old ud muat wear • choke' collar ·and !iJ:.foot leash. Junl_or b~dlers must be • at least~el&bt years old and accompanied by an adult. DAILY PILOT C... M.. hi Ch:111111te OltAMGe COAST 9'utLt1HtNG COMPANY lt1b1rt N. W11d ' PruiohM Ind PvMllNr J••k It. Curl1y Vb Pt'U~ 11141 Gftlerfl MMIOH" Tht."''' K.,.,;i Ecl!tor 1\1111•1 A. Murphi"' M ..... 11'11 Editor • Rich~ '· Nill Soutll, 0"""1f! Countr Edltw OHie" ~?i:i.~ii~ w~1·1~i:o:1&:'i.w,. Uit• INdl1 2lt !"-' A-M"'""9IOI! hedl: 11US Blfdl l ;wle\01"" $11!\ Clt!Mn'-1 JI,$ Nori~ El C1m1,,. 11••1 OAILY PILOT. WH!I w)kh 11 '~of "" ",_..,....., i. PllO!l1illc'd cn11y n«s>r s...,. ... "' _.r•"' <llt--for l.lt!llN Bt.:th, ......,, lffc:ll, t;Mtt MltUI, H1111!1ngiO<'t ....0 111111 l"tUnlt"' "•llfY, •lo"' •11-'" r11i.MI .cilll!MI. '°""'" C.nt Pwoli"'irll ~ pr1n11111 111111i,,11 ,,. ,, nn w ... , .... ~ ........ New;otf !IMO, t r.ii iJO Wnf .. , ,.,_, t.I• IN ... ,. ........ 11141 442-4321 Cl•lfW A'"'*l•I-. 642·1•11 t. Cke&Ala AM hp*"-lthit , •••••••• '4fJ-4421 c.¥tlftlt. lfM, ~ t01Wt l'\IDUlhllll ·~. NII MW1 tl0<"1. U:lf\tra1:-. ....... -"" ., ,d....,~11 Ill!'•"' INY kl r~ wl!NUI Nlltifl ,.., • .... .,~ . .-.. ...... ~ .._,. Hi.I tt Nra'llW1 ••>6 lll'A Ohll MIMI, "Ctlllomlt, SWIU;OIJoll .,_ ~rrW UM nw.1llllf/ a,. !NII U.Jf -ll'l!fl """"" M tlnelllM. U.• "'°""'If· • ~· • authorlUes for taking new steps to guarantee public beach access up and down the coast. He discussed his proposal for the formation of a Santa Margarita National Park which . Would include part of Cleveland National Forest and the northerly areu of Camp Pendleton. "This area lends itself to national park status. 1 think it should seriously be 'considered since it could be used on a 12-month basis." He moved to an environmental pro- blem, one that fc•ces this district, that of proper sewage treatment. "This is.n't a very romantic subject," Wilcoxen said, "but there are violaUons of the water quality control standards throughout this district. We • have to take severe measum so that we will not further pollute the ocean. The pollu-. tion ii already occuning. This problem mayif.ake federal u.sistanct·to solve." In tthe are8: of educaUon the father of four said bls record ls one of support for educatiOn. He sai4 he has been concerned because the property tu has become more ancl more wiequitable for school financing. He said be believes tax sharing wtll be qicreasing oo the national level since education is our country's chief defense. On another issue he voiced dissatisfac- tion that Congress has lost control of the spending function. "Rule by executive order instead of Congressional control has gotten out of hand." he said. He promised to bring fiscal responsibility back to the Congress. Attorney Added To Plan Meetings .T~~ Laguna Beach Planning Com- mission will have a city attm:ney present at all future meeUngs, commission secretary Al Autry advised planners at a study ·session this week . The need for readily available.__ legal · 'advice •t planning sessions was pointed out again by i.cting chaJrman J oseph Tomehak when two items had lo be de- ferred for legal opinions at the commis· sion's last meeting. Advised that the proposal would be considered in city budget st'.ldies1 Tomehak said. "That would mean July, Meanwhile this situation is frustrating for us and for the people who come here expecting a decision." At this week's study session, Autry s.a(d be had ·di&eussed the problem with Cit~ Manager James Wheaton, who agreed the Planning CommiSSion, like the City Council should have regular , repfeSent.atlon ·from the city attorney's office al all meetings. teacbing first graders to type. Mitchell MDM group, ~ Students for a "security" at the house around the clock, c~ tb¥ the UJHWDed district's third Democratic SQctety and the Black the tenseneas of the situatiori is obvious. grlderl.,.,. yeara laler could not read Panther .Party. . And the MDM .movemeot D>w hu' anti wrlte: Tile MDM spnkamen~ cbatCO !hat its martyr · · · · •• • • · Mltdlell Aid he felt lht State Board the Cnrps has blamed them wrongly for The MOM leallel heralding tonight's inciting the vlolelit'dlalurllances. · rally says· of EducatJon bad tried to be effective "We will not ·be int J mid ate d 1'' "Broth~ Jesse wu· shot down because in the J>lll but said lhtre had been spokesman Tom Hurwitz sald in a he stood up lo sptat for and lo f1ie disniptiODI ~to educaUon and "a lot prepared statement Wedqesday, "Neither nHVlJe who ·-"".'"" • .pe~ by of snlplog going no." '" , .. , -· ..._" · Tea.le said one. Senate responsibility the brass, nor the terrorlsts.~wlll atop the military ... when ·fin& 'JMlt· en the has been budgeting for the board of us from corniuu.ing to fight for.-.tbe rights stretcher Brother Jesse shouted 'all li of Gts." • power to the people'." education. e said he was concerned And to illustrate their point; the group But n0t ,au the wralh · of the MDM The award-winning architect who is .. a member of tbe UCI Project 21 Open · Space Study Team blamed a great deal of ugliness on the various city and county departments which d on ' t cooperate. ·'!;' From Page J KOPECHNE. •• over the relationshlp of the state board ann~ plana ~ediate)y after the Is aimed at the military. . ;· and the superintendent. "It appears the shooting for a demomtratlon at an Civilian police are equally to blame, hitend to go to ~dgartown, bi.eluding: I' department of · education is co1lapsing n-~ Id k t lght t lh the f her internally,'' said Tealt. ''I dOl'l't think V\,._ns e par on to pro est e sevtral m~mbers said as y pondered -Miss Kopechne le t purse a it is effective." • incident. what to dcr abou,t a bro~ m¥oeograph the cottage where she and Kennedy _ "We expect at least 1,000 marchers," machine, ! had been attending a party for Kennedy , He said the department had a tremen· one member said with a smile '"""-y ··' !ht milliary work hand •·· 1r1·ends and· "boiler room'' ""'ls who ..• · dous amount of· money to pass out and · • ' ,.~ auu •ur -said he wu not l!IUte 'that 1t reviewed 'lbe rajly ~ will be followed by hanl.·Y;~ cu·t· hav~ .o~ssion in the ha_!! worked i.a the Robert Kennedy cam.- the uae to which the money waa 'put "Nin<! Dar• ln~ay,~a-·~~ -~ '*"°'11 · --Imm !ht paiK!'i. including Miss Kopechne. "Someooe lhlnka It Is Important or they Jn the <lty Pl'!testlng the -• ..,.. poll~," ..., m~ said. ·-Mi.S KClpeChne did oot a~ her room- would n« haye appropriated several bun-In fact, posten heralding the nine But ~ pointed iout one ~-mate at the 'motel for tbfi .key to their d~·-"''"""'J·,"T~1e ."~~.'' ''·'', days -IOI ~-<f\iliiiil·~ """'isten , . ....,r:_ m01111iils alter the roombefore leavinglhe·piirly. · '· '~ ur·nuui.om ca .Hlu• at i)\e },D)M' _ · -~Wtii:.Jii"al(I i'Iliiante car ~d .off 'IMO \fie 'dafkness -The· rerey ~that crossed from Chap- Teale u)ed Mitchell~s opinion. Mitchell the mardles ancf .c69er bullet Shattered someone in the house made a phone paquiddick Island to FAgartown stopped · said he didn't know since he has thus wind.091. · call for help. -at midnight, and no special arrangements far attended only three meetings of the One obvioua WCITJ' to the · group and They~-i»lice, for a later croWg bad been made. :• 'board. 1-----------------~----------------------'.'-Teale pointed out that Mitchell served on a county board of education which was the recipient of IUCb funds and asked if the state had furnished effecUVe leadership and taken advantage ol pro- mJsing programs. Mitehell respoaded that the Orange County School Board had as economical an operation as any in the atlte-::and told ol his own work to strengthen . ·its operation. ' P...,.ing his queotlon, Teole ~k~ II the st'ate board and state departmtnt of educaUon had been of mucl. help. Mitchell said yes it had but added that there is only so much money to pass out. Teale said a bit later, "I didn't get an answer. How effective has the depart- ment and the state board been in furnishing leadership?" Mitchell said Orange County had received a good deal of cooperaUon .and opined that with the present board Ole relationship with Rafferty's office will be a smocitber one. ,1 • Te41e 18ld It was one thing to ·get coop4!rattan when you •ask · fdr 'it ·and still another thing to furnish )eadersbjp. Two senators on the rules conupi~ commended Mitchell for giving candid an,,wers. Smiling Mitchell said, "I'm not doUig it ·fot the money. you knbw." The post is not one that is salaried. Gets Conspiracy Rap NEW YORK (UPI) -Carlo Gambino, the 8.Ueged "boss of bosses" of all Mafia families, was indicted Wednesday on charges of conspiring to hijack .an cpmored :truck transporUng..,mtlUOns of dollars iJ1 cash. BIG :BEDB~ . ~ form1l lhfl11' ..... Tle9 ' you'd •lqlllCt to cc.c much, much mor•I saw on elegant triple dresser bedrooms by ~noir Jfouse $299 . ~·:,~11:i:::~..:~. 1~i. '"°'lllW Ind de:llQll It' Ills l • i'tint~Y tow ll!"lct. E•cll llN~ , ~tJWt .• ;ti'OVP fl\(!..._ i ·~ ffl~i.rofrtMfr, 1111"'!', _tmJ h.M; 1 -l>Hcrllolrd. Cfln'f ).llllt IM\ ,. • OU'1fl!l'llr'lll Ni.t • S,.5"1 Cllall Slit .II ' tllta T.W. SU.It .,,. . " ··- .. · . .. 539 Set· Sail Fleet Off to Ensenada Under bright, sunny skies and llgbt southwesterly winds,. a fleet of catamarans led 539 sailing yachts off Newport Harbor at the stroke or noon today in the start•of the 23rd annual Newport· Ensenada yacht race. The anticip11ted field of 565 was cutto 539 at the starting gUn as 31 craft dropped oot. ' Boats started streaming out of Ute jetty at 10: 30 a.gi. beading for the dual starting lines of( the Balboa Pier. The cats went off at noon sharp with three other dfvisions fOllowlng at 10 minute inter- vals .. _ The first boils Villi start arriving in Ensenada 125 nautical mile$ away early on Friday. ' ---·The complete list entries (including the dropouts) will be found on Page 8 of today 's DAILY PILOT. ' 1 t : . a.n.~tld Modtrn lln• with UlllltUlfl dilNnllOMI loott. .. S1EE OUR FULL PAGE AD IN PAMILY WE!KLY-MAY 2 .. -H.J.GARRETf fURNf!URE PROFESSIC~L 2115 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR ·DESIGNERS Opff M-1'llln. & Fri. lfn. CQSTA MESA, CALIF • 646-0175 646-0275 t· ---·--- ,. ,, .. I ' .. "'· .. ty Id Ill. ". "' ut en· ,,; . l'~' ·. ,,. .. 1ly "" .. tn» ot- 1111 all · '• llS , og >le its--" ... i1 .. en !II :nd ' l .. . at ~y . ~y •ho •. ._· m- m- eir " •P. ltd nts .... ·. ·' " •• .. . .. .. .-... .. ·" ., • '"""1d07, April 30, 1970 Wt Ha~Fast 5 on Coast l---.::LEG:::~AL~N[OTl::CE::--~·1--:-:::U::!G~AL~~N;OTl:CE:=::::--l-~~L.IGAL::::~~NO::TICZ::.~-l·~==LIO==·jL~JIO~n~ICZ===---l-~~l.IGAL~ llO'llCll I T~ · "~• ,..,,... NOTtciiivn .... .,....-; MOTIC• to c-•an•• C.UTiflC'ATI °' IUSlfllllt ..... tat '''"""'"'"'., MlttttlM ~ k...,...,, _.,__ ....... ..... Get Awards !~IUUC ,.,,,.,,.. PICTITIOUI llAMt: su•••• <*'IT -,,.. Pt(flflOW ..... " ,,. .... ., .. 0r-c...~ t-. .. Ufl .. ltl U.C.CJ 'flit ~ dot• urtt.... J1t b STA'9 oP cM.~•flOfl ,,_ ......... -e#tll'f' M .. ~ llhtr10 tf Of9NI_ , Holkt II ,_.,..., .. _ 119 lbt CrMlll!n ~ 1 -~ .t ,,,, Clfl'IM flfl ~.,...... ........... 1 ..,._ .. P.O. .. ., .. C:111tw111 .. 11111 ,...,,,. _.... 11ti1a ti 0~110£ H. WIAVEI.. Jlt, fftd o.M, N""""" hKll, C1llWll!t, IJ<ldtr ... .,._ lnolllt, ~ .,..... ttit llctfttlul ti l :Of I.Mo ,......,, #"11 \lo Fl ' ~ ,.__ OE-.U.DIHf WEAVElt.. TrMMfr-.,. lktft*" ttrm NI-" IH· ..one• OP' ~ •• .,.,,..... IALI """ MIM " "'" COU"'"''f' ........ Purctlllll9 o.t .• MM Cambodia Action o,:e -an,e ....... st are.a ""*' .,.._ ....,.,. • IJI • --Wiit •Dlt!M.Tl()ft MANAOl:MENT StltVICES °" •U.i. PltWllT'I" AT NIVATI Tlll'llll&:t .. tlltf MM fl"" .. ~ .i.tfkf ..... ,., .. 11'1 ,..,.,... .... "~ '-ba -1 • ....i -n '''"1• """"'°"' tHcft. '-"'If Or.,..., Md '""' 'M1t fltl'l'I i. cwn"*' « SAU ....,.. If tNi "'"""''* ~ wtloM C:..te -.... C../ltlllftll.I • ..,.. .... Swut:lho Ye 1-•~ ~ege s1111 ., c111t1n11e, ""°' • .,. trlMIM' rt1e to1ew1111 .~ WfllM -1n 111 1111 Metler .. ._ c..wsw•INI !WM 1111 t1111 ... 11..C. ., mi.-:. .. .., .._ 111111 .. '"*""' ....,.. fi'lll schoJ -a.Lo-..i.. from~ i. ll&lwt to M ...... '9 WILLIAM fl.Ill lllf Iii.et f/f ,....._,. ll M tolkrwl· flf h ,..,._ W hl0119 flf Hll.IN II M ~· SWiii twr .......... ran.,.,.. ··-H. Hf~LANO ltld WILLIAM J. WINllim a.,. ... , .. M ... 1111n. OtiW. c. U.JfDllll. C...•..... ...... N. Mc<IM. aft !11/MW'I Ottb -(.._._ ~ to '250 by Retail Clerks Union {:(~1~: l1111:h~--=-~IMll.!:r, NtWMtt IHd!. t.llfwnll ..OT1<'1 IS Hlllll'f' •IYIN Wiit . Nt. •• '"'' ·-~ C•llflnll1. ·~Ill, Oo ......... c.-. 1 C:-IY o1 Ot-1-. Stti. ol (lllletll\L Cleci.d M'U ,,, 1'JO Ille ~ JAM•I .. W.IM, 'llMc ) 0.... °""It ft, 1t1' · All 1io. -• Ill ~ Local 314 ln Buena Park, .::--TM ....-rtv lo lie trtMf9rtd .. llKlfW int• OF t'.:1;JNI':. G~NI-.. CWllW.., ·., .. ""-• JlrNlll "· MCClllll ty1 ::1t:1::":t:·~ -"'= fl .. Has Big Gamble WASlllNGTON CAP) -The U.S.-supported Sou t b Viel· namtse move Into Cambodia could yield a double dividend, military $0Urces say. AJ they .see ·it, the action could ease the North Viet· namese threat to the Cam· bodian capital of Phnom Penh while d isrupting a key base area from which the North NEWS ANALYSIS Vie tnamese and Viet Cong often have struck into South Vietnam: Military officers suggested th e apparently large-sc'ale South Vietnamese operation into Cambodia's "Parrot's Beak" might help derail any e nemy offensive moves into South Vietnam next month. The Sooth Vietn.amese at- tack supported b y American advisers, fl.ghterboll'!bers, artlllery, heli· copters, medical and sup ply aid·marked a widening of the Southeast Asian war. Wha t it will mean lo the United Slates over the long haul remains unci!rlain. ground • .and the full scope of the operaUon. The origins of ~e operation wtre obscure. Some Pentagon sourees said they und<rolood hard-p"""d Cambodian Premier Lon Nol had l!lked the South Viet- namese for help in diverting North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops thrtatening his capital and small army. These 90Urcts said there were reports that Saigon's joint general staff, alter con· sidering the Lon Nol bid several days ago, asked the \J.S. Command in Saigon for air and other support in a foray into the enemy base area in Cambodia. ""'rd~ .. to unlon officlals 1f lWt HtwPOi'I llYll •• OMI• MtM. (Nn .... OitAMOI COUNTY: ' • •Ill 1 ..... '.. Hill"! c.. .... Dllll. •i: .. ~~~· ,r:--.. c::: -· • ~ _, .. tlCV... In •flll ... ... v 1416 • of,Or•ll8•· llllt" C.tl!or111.. Oft ... .,u ,, ,,,.. '""!II-. • Nett,-, c ... ,,....., .. " •" It ~"" ............ ~llbHC lft .... for NW " .. " .... Pwdlltlll'll """" ., ......... C ~•11&-was open to -4114 ,,..,,......, It estM.rlbff 1ft •-r•1 ltub11t in ~ tor .. w Stitt 11Y ,. "" •"""t '" .,_ ,.. .....,., 1 · Mt( ~ •••lrlct OfflY"" .. M l .,: All 91ock ln lr1$, llJ!ll,ll'K, el!lilllnlnl ,_,.,. ~Ulllm 0""' 111;ri0._':t'':-"'I '""' *'*'dllll {If 41!\"f ,.._ .... w.Qr•t r:n:: ~ ·::-.::.::... ...:= M:nt ii.tell' illldMr 11\l"'t Wllfn" wttft flll members of the union and ind told wm ·°' '"-' bMr t1w1m te" th•""*'*'*"'"'"'' .. ""°",... -i.1111. "~ "" twmt IM an-.. t111ttu• ,. tM w11111n 1"""-nl tlld • ""'""' <MU. •' (Mfl,... dlilCk. ~111111 knewn •1 "'QUEEN a all:Elt. td to 1111 Wllflln IM!t-~I ttw:i dltlo:'tl ,.........r l!ll'llt ....... ~ Inf ld:ftO'll'l ... tf lie l•llflf tf1t,.,..., er tilffirr'\ 1111111 mtdt """" t. tM their children or spouse. TAVERH" 11111 loutw 11 IM1 "''"'"'' Klt-lldDed ""tMalltrd ""' MIM. .. ......,..,. "" 1111 ............. <Ollll'ICIAL llAL) .,., of tllt °''"'• Cotti NlllW e.i• a1Y11., CMI• """"· C-IY el °''"''' tOtllclll $1110 ....,..,. c.rt. • .M'I' L tne. .. ---H CIP!tttl Dlatrlct ... ,.. el T""""' '" 1n -.Ustf Jotm J Rtldtt 8 t SO '''''of c.111or11i.. ,,.,.,., IC. Mf!I,-, 11• O'dldt l'.M,, • """9tt.t 1tlltllfl '"'"" Miic cint«Me "°' .._, """ n ... "'°"" t"'> "' ' ' Tiit 1111111 lritllflfl' wtll tit toMU.,,.....lltf Not1,-, lt!IMI(: • C•llfrtrr.!e !fie tlMt ...... IW l1w, It 1t!1 lftkl PrliMJHI 0ttk. II 1N '""" Wei 11 • l!Mf"llllOI ftllf 1111 Cardinal Valley, Avenue, Fountaln .,.. or 11i.r lt!I '"' u., of ,,.,.,., ~rhKINI Otli«o In f/I "" 0.""*'I " bit "~ or..... COllnfrr ltldclitr will tnttr h!i. "" ..,.,..... lf'll, 11 IOtlG A,M, 11 GlilOYElil 1$CllOW °'""'° C:eu""' WY1ctt. e..wt {If Orlntt. It SIS M" ('ll:MUMIM lu!fft; Contt'Kt If 1M NIM It IWI,.. fll received f150 fDf_ COllPOllA'rl()N, 111 •. llllnoli, AMl\tlm, M" C-IUIOn Eulra H'*'"' lW,:1-1, lllltl APll, C.llf9rllll, ,,.;..,.,..,. 1(. tm fll!\\, hi t1w -t {If felM'e '9 """' Courrt'I' of OrtMI• Sl1l1 ot C1Ulorn!1, New, 1(. 1'12 •ti W tltlll, tlflt, \ftlrff'IU 11111 ntl" ft9bll"'-0 C-t CllllJ> lttlot, 1ftto •vdl CllltTKf, 1111 ,,...._ If undergraduate $ludy. H 11 '°~:;_.: :..: :ir'ld it:~~ ll..Oillllld ()f'qe CCNlll Otll!I """'"' ..... MILIN (, '" N DI Iii '· o\firtl n. .. ,::i:," 1'1'0 ,...,. "" dltd: wllt be ............ ., ....... b-'"-M k n-'der _,_ •11 .. " h! .._ 1111 llll'll 'l'M'9 Altrll :It. MIY 7, 14 rJ, ltJll l'tf.10 tlMlr"""'• In tnif .. 11111 Cll'tll!I -.t 1 """"' ftlt' fUll ..,. ....,, 1~, tr na , ~ ~11 .,..,, ~'f.'. M:!"" ,... ,,....,., ...,,...., " to1i.w.. " • •"1M..1f' N011CE wttt lll ""'l"",. 11hl K11M1 lllllMCt-··•·1-~1 r .. · · · LEGAL NO'l1CE wtt· ._..,.,.. No .....,. _.,. ~· 1111 .w ,., received I ~JU llllNI p or Dltld: "-'11 IS, "JO. .Lit NIMIY-ll\llt" "Trtct N .. "''" • _.. et ,.,.,... .... l41 • .,. Mtlf' . W1li11m H, HttdlflllCI """" ,._ ~ j,. ,_,.,.. 1111 .i11, tet fw f1M --........ undergraduate study m the ~11111 .... J. Mc•rtc11 NJ'ID ::,_ 1" ,:_ • 11 of M/tclllllftlM c1aT..,,CATI' • aus1111s1 Tiii klf11 " '""'"'" _.,..;. 911 amount of $500. 011:ov111:··::= CDltl"OIU.TIOH ClltTlllllCAfl 0111' 8 USINUS Ml~ --., 0r.,.. c-tv. Tiie _,:.~,!."':~.:Ill It a. ~:"-.~ ,.::nr,,.:: ....... ·:.. ~ Tom Gieser, 2124. Vertm0 ~.:.:..!...~11i.,1111 '"-~~="!. ~~1~ 111n ,,. ea~llU"~ 111 _._, .. ,.. .....,. ~ • .......,_. .. ...,. H. ,.....,... ..._111i. 111 ,.,... w .. 1n ~ .. .... Pl....... Irvine received t1:M Dcnw;.., lfJHI Cfllldudtlll • IMIP!ttl " »vi w. l'lt'9t l'ftllh _,..._,. ... 11\tlOMt • lfWlllt 8l ...... N-' lllldl. Ctllflnlt • ..., HOllMAH I . WATSON .. ,..,, 1 .,..,.,., P··"O"-.. C o D 01• Piiot "·1--• -· •• .... ..., • -W ~ flrln -f/11 ISSI •r.111 llcf'I,. s pecUically ror ltudy at UC ~'i'»'.lm 1"" °'1 ' ar.,0 f/(i11~1'"""""':i,.;:'':;"'~1&""'£,L'E-S :;:*i.;;f'. 0t • tMt °'"' t1nn "__..of~.... ...,...,f,.,.1w1 Irv! •M ""'' 111111 llrm 11 ~--f/11 c-1" ~ ••• • ... ~ ....... -... fUll ... O'IEN ! Ml" 11. 1fl't -,. ...... . ne. LEGAL NOTICE 1111 to•llrtll'I"' ---. Wflftt ~ '" net ""' *3 Hott lttttt .......,.....,. .-. • ,..~ 111 •• tro"-1: ,111>11.n.i °"'• ~ DltlY ....,, Awards o[ '250 for onder-, --===,..-,==-:::-:::::--lllllt aftd 1llcH of i"l'lllcffn« ,,. h hldl. c.11torn11 ' """"""L lt"#lftr, l»lt Efll'I Piia, ~II JO, Ml" 7. 1'1t m.11 1 • touo" · """ Ml. Clllf. g raduate Stu .... were received SUf'llllOllt COUlt_T o• THI ; ... ,, 810a .. olftr1 .... In'!'!! .. fw .. 111 ~*'""" .. )ml • _..... NOTl- G "'~. hi 'lolV\l1 STA'rl 0, CALll'OllNIA fOlt. DCIMlll S.nd. JM PtlttlOll ,. ~ .ri.i "llltl M In wrll1111 9ft Howtllrt S. IEYl!\dtr Lll:Aln,u '-D by ary A • ..,..,tc ey, ,,._, THI COUNTY 01' 011.ANOI _.,, (Ml) MIM. C1Htornl1 W t Md fllrm M"llllW W 11M Mllv, 5...._ {If C.llfW'nll. °'-11tt (Ol.mtvr N -• c Ila Court Costa *· A'6SIN DorMt1 5• S.1111. '* ,,,.,.,. '" whlctl wm bl rK•r-1 11 1111 l'ltlcto Cl!I Mrtl a. 1 1t ~ Not Oi loll ape ' NOTICI OP NUltlNO Of! ltl'TITION '°°'r C°'ll M ... , Cllltor11lt Of 1111 llvllllc OUlfll.IWI 110 ~llf r ' 1111' 1 ..., P4Mn Mesa and Robert T . He.int-110• 111110.•T• o, WILL AND ~11 011M APl'll tJ, ttl'O c .... tni.it sir..t. s.1111 .._.;., c111tw1111. =.ie,.: =-~ :'~w~ =': c:•11:",",,'"',,,•,...1 OJ: •us1•-•~ B U t La H t Ll!TTllllS TllTAMINTAll'f' DMtld O. ~nd or 11 Ille office If fl.Ml l"....-tY • ..,. man, 1......... e a.s ne, un. Elf••• et JEANNE L. •ANT• .,.. OOI'"" '· SIM Stn'lc•• ef Or1n1t COuntv JIS ,..,... :::. ,.~ -~ .. ·:, ~:..... TM ....... ,.It ....... Cltfl1"' ...., ·~ lngton Beac h . •r;ro~1~£JE1~NNH\:iEi~VEQ1~~·e:~, ~~'li~~"ctt~f~.~NIA. =r:., 11t!:n'~n11•n:;_ ~~::'"~· ,: rt.:i~f:l11':L)l1<~ 1111 ......... ~~:J,:'~:V~.&'f~~= LEG .. NOTICE W1Lt.IAM F. LOVE 1111 tiled ller1ln Oft APl'll ,,, ''"· btfort ...... I •be-lltlld Suptrlor c .... rt ,, int 1111'111 H CINllll 1111 fldllloul 111'!'11 ,.. ........ lUll:OTltAOI!· l\ofANY MEETINGS ~ 1 petition for 11robltt ol will 1"4 Not1rv P1;blk In Intl fOt" nld Sttlt'. time lfltr flrit Mlltelloll of !I'll• Mellt• H 1 ;,lltiH C.lllfor i. IMl'Olt'r·IXl'OllT 111t1 llllt aeltl tltt!I II l---:-::=:::--:::--:c:;::::;;-o;;-::::::--l1or IH1;1nc:1 of Ltll1 r1 'r1111ment1rv wi.o~•llY •~1'141 Oonlkl G. ~ nd 1111 kf!lo kl 1 e 11"1' c-n ~ ol fM follewlnt """"' wl'llll o .e fens t Department of· SUPllltOlt COUllT 0, ""' .. IM 111!1tlontr, rtlt•ll\C.• lo which •r'lll OGrHll s. lentl kllOWn le mt • tE..%s' ~ u.t'1· C!iti Ill Jtwl\01 ~rlnclNc' Oftk:• 111 "'Mlt In lull .......... ,...lflllct -· ed th had be S'rA'r• 0' CALlflOlllNIA 1'011: 11 m.telo! !Or N•llltr "rtkultP'I, tnd to bt lht H!'tOM ~I nt:ntl IA · lf!IH OUll!Y n hlllowl! • ficials not -ere en THI COUN'f'( 01" 011: .. .NOI 11111 lh• tllTM .,,,., .. 11c1 of lltlflfl9 •~btertblld hi Ille wltllln lnltrYf!lflll 11111 _., "' 1111 Unlllcl ltt!tt. ... Cllll Mt" (tn'ltl'lh•lon lll•lt• Merllvn J. Artl.no, 10UI """"-- high-level meetings over the "'·A"*" 1111 wmt ft11 ·bttn 1er w M•,. u, 1c1tnowi.o1tt11111" tx•t~ltd tht .. n,.., °'"'"" 111.,. Hur'lllrttl f'*.001 Doll•'• '-'· u. Hn •w .. "°""'"'" v111r1. C•llfwllll NO'rlCI 01' HIAltlHO 0, PaflTION ltJ'O, 1t t:lO 1.n,.. I~ Slit courlrmm (Oltlcl1I 511111 ft'lllll KCOl'!IPl"Y ffdl WfllMll ltld er l"VMllllW Or1ngt C..t 1)11111 111191, An!Mn" Artltrio. llN1 Nlltttf•lll past three or four days, at-l'Olt 1110••"• Ofl NOLOOllAPHIC et Dfl>l•tmtnt Nf , s et Mid tOllf"I. 11111111 J. Vinet flftr, !ht blll ftCI " lilt .,.....(tll .. ,,IQ ...... u •• 1 .. '" 3D. lt111 ....... Ave., l'eunlll'I v.11..,, C.itflrflll tended by Secretary O f WILL ANO ,Dlt LI T f I a I .i 700 (IYk Ctni.r Orin W11I, 111 Note,-, Jlubll~ · C1lllornl1 le bt "Id In 11111 Wll!\111 11.tv tlly1 Cllrt M. '""-MUI Mltll!lftltlt 'f•STAM•NTAlt'( 111e Cl,... of 5-nll AM, t.1llfornl1. Jlrlncl"I Oltlt• In dltr Cwrt ConflP'l'l\ltlon If tlle. LEGAL N011CE Ave .. r:wnt1ln V•""'• C.llfwnl• Defense Melvin R. Laird and Ell•tt 111 OSCA• w. AUIE. Dl«•ml. Oeled ""'" ,., 1t1D. Ot•llfl Cellllty Al( blcll • offtpt -·· lie 111Dmn11o11 Dllloll ..,.. 1, '"' h I NOTICE 1$ Hl!!•E•'f' GtVEN Tllll w. E. $T JOHN, e-.... Clttk. ""'" Ctmmi.loil E•,i,., en . form f\lf'ltUlllll 'Y 1111 •lllr. ~1 Anttlen)' "'"'"° Gen. Earl G. W e e er• v1o11 G. Aube "" tried "'r.111 , ;oe1111on SELIM s. P'ltAHkLllll o.etmbtr " ltl9 1 Tiit r19111 to Hltct -lfttl 111 "* ci•T•l!'tCAT• Of< aniNllS MlrllYn J . .vt1to111 chairman of the Joint Qliefs 1ar pnibltt e1 helotrlPl'llc wm •1111 111 l:•lf lttll "'"' J1ubt1Mtot Of'lftff CCNlll 0.1,... " 1o1 ., '*"'" rewrcott1. ,,CTITIOUS MAMI c11r1 M. """"""' S ff II &•I.. lor IJ.WlllCI ol L•tttP'I 'rnt1mtnl1,., CRI• Mui. C1n1orn11 nil, Al!•ll JD,,.,,.,.,, 14. tl. IJJll 11•n DATED: AprH 21. Im ~ lllldef•ltftlCI uirllllff ht b co,,. STA'rl! 01' CALll'Olt.NIA,. O( ta , as we as uu1er 10 tile petllloMr, rlferenc:I lo wllldi Tth 11141 M-ttS1 Jt!NI I . Helm -'11Ctlna 1 tiusl ...... II 17121 Sk." J11rtr. Cir-OltANGE COUNTY1 t,.,... administration authorities. 11 mff1! 1er N•lllc• .,.n1cu11 .... •nd At111r•,."' '•fltllMr Doi" ""'· LEGAL NOTICE f'ublk Ck:lnll111. c-erv11w ,1,, P.O. e011 llU. 1"'1..,., c.tnttr11i., Oii Al"'lt 1, mo.....,.-.,.,....,., ... ,, 11111 "" tllM •l!d 119" "' hMrl111 P11b!l111tc1 Or_, CMll •T et tM ,.,_ 111111 l•l•IO .. ""'"' tM tl(HI .... firm !lltM .. L T, , .... II: 1 .. lfttl for Mlf ...,.,, --11" 'llley managed lo keep the "" Mme lllt be9fl "' !er MIY IS. ""'ll >O, M•~ ,, 7, 1t1• •11-10 Hrtltft c. S.lldtP'I. C-IM LITHO .. l"llllN'rlNG co. -""' Mid -rM' Mlrl1"11 J. Artllno. Aftflltn'I ... ,. talks and the .i--ision a close 1t10, 11 •~JO '""" In tM eo11rt"*"' LEGAL NOTICE •A• ,.,,. ADlllAH 1eu.,.,.a11:, COUNT'!' couin•L r1rm·i. "°"'_... e1 1111 f611ow!M Pl•IM tttno, ,,,. Cit•• M. ai-. """*" • • u= • of ~rtrntnl Ne. ' et Mid ceurl. SUPlltlOlt cou•t 01' ,... .... JOltlt M. PATTlltlOH, Hl'Uf'f' ........ PlllM•lll Ml I nd"'" et~ -..... "" -""'--.,. secret until the surprise an-II 1UO (IYk Centff Drlw Wnl. In ITA'rl OP' CALIPOll:HIA 1'04t 1141 ... Cltffi.I Im.I " •• loll9wl: •ublulbHI .. "" wlltlln ~'"" ls Wednesday Ille CITY" S1nl1 A,.., Ctl!lornll. .... ~-t"tt TNI COUNTY M OltAMGll s.ltl ....... """'""' '"" U...."11 o. T1'!lmll. '°'° INNMY!lll Kll ....... lldltd """' PICll!Oof "" """" nouncemen • DllM °'Prll 7~. 1t1'0. Cl!:llTll'ICATI DP' •UllHllSS Ne. A..... ,......,.._, tMotrn ClllVll'I 11:.i .. L ........... '°°"'· C.llf. {Olflclll Itel! American gene rals I 0 n g w. E. '" JOHN l'ICTITI0\11 JllllM MAM• MOTICI 01' M•AltlNO 0, .. t:TITIOH A"'"""" ... PRlk .... ,... O.ttd A.,11 14. lt71 ,.," L. Joail the Counl'I' Cloertl Tltt undl!f'1l1ned don htrtbll certllv POiit PltOaATt: 01' WILL 180ND P1,1Mltflttl Grl"Ot Cottt Diii" Jlllol lfft1111 G. T1*nu Ne11,-, Publlc • Ctllfenlll have wanted to cross SELIM •. P'ltANICLtN ,,... lie II Cond!;C:tlnt • bu•lntH It WAIYlOI ANO ,011: "I! TT •• I Apr M .. M.l'I' I, 7, Hl'll '""" ITA.TE o• CALIFOllNIA, ,.,~IH1 Oftlct In NO ELABORATION ___border into Cambodia and ~'.'it:'::.!.~c~'~;:1111 ::.c~1111c!':: s!~"'o.~:,Z.."' s~.~~ i:1~1::•:J:~~. icuEaLEll, O.C..•· O~N:!11~f~~~ ""°" ..... 1 Holtry ~·~~ • .,.,.. Pentagon o!ficials refused to smash the complex ol North T11: cno S41-Dl1 c1Utornt1, lll'ICltf' 111e nc11t1eus firm ,..,... "'· LEG'" NOT!,... ,.,blk ln •r'lll .., 111<1 s111t. ,.,_1tv Mtrc.111. 1tn I . Co ., ...... ,.., 'tllt'-t" or dctklMlloll Wl!lci'I doll not lhlrw NOTICI!: IS HElllE8Y GIVEN Tllll n.u "'D ''"'"" Ltnlnl G. Tlwlrnl• ,_le,,... ll11bltlllld °"'"" CMlt 0.ltr """· e aborate on a series of Vietnamese and Viet ng llub!l•llld Or•-Coe•I 0•11" "llol, Ille tnie "'-or "'"'" of tM HrlO!ll WILMETTA c . FEESAGO Ml fllld l'llr•lll hi " "" """" ................. i. wtiKrlbo Allrll '·II. n. 30. ""' ..,,.,.. sketchy statements issued by base camps which for more .Y•ll "·JO 11111 M..," 1110 7t7·7D 1nt1ra1tt11n wld bu11nKi. io.wn : PANCO • ... 1111on tor Pnlllll• of wm 111onc1 " to tht •llfll~ lnatrv<Nnt •nd ' LTO 1r'ld 11111 .. kl firm II compell'd Wtl*l 11\d lor l•WlllCI of l.ittrs T...., fell,,....,, .... I'll~ Wll ..-. the United States and South than five years served the LEGAL NOTICE o1 iii. 1o11ow1.., .-erMlll, wrioM 111m• .,_.,.,,,.n,.,.,. to "'"111ne •. ,."""""' to 11or1c1 • ut.• v "'"" ,.. .. 1onk1tl ... ,, VI I h ' f t 11111 aodPiU It 11 1o1iow.· Wfllcl! 11 mlOI for lll•lfter ,.rllclll•"' PlltTI' AT PlllVATI SAl.8 ~ K. W....., e nam. tnemy as a aven or res , re-G•"' Pintui.o. J6i v1111 l1Y1. 1nd s1111 ""' 11m1 11111 ,11e1 et 11e..-1ne .... A"'* . Net•rf l"utilk • c.1"°"'111 The Saigon defense m inlstry equipment and retraining. tAlt 147• N,..,._t ee1ch, c1111orn11 '16'° 1111 uSM 1111 brtft aet f6r M•v ls, t Ulll••• cov1tl Olli TM• Pr111d1111 Otlk• In .._"1 ",o' •""•••TH · • oO•ICI TO CllOOTO•I WOTNESS m• "" !hit 21th dtt" lf1'11. ti 9:JD •.m., In 1'111 COUPll'Clll'l'I STA'rl OI' CALll'OttlillA Ortntt c-ty '""'' It I said the Soi;th Vietnamese When the Lon Nol group SUJllllGll COUlll'r a, THI: fl APrH, 1f1D. of DtNrl""'11 No. ' ol 1114' courl, POil TMI COVNTV Ollll OltANGI ,,,,.,. Com!'l\111 ... lxlllrel IUJlllllOlt cOU•T °" '"' troo 'JJ IJ b k f ~ t J' J p " e STA'rl o, CALIPOllMIA JI04t Gt"' P1ntu90 11 700 C:lv!c Ct nltr OrlYt Wut, In I" "'9 Mllltr ol fM IUI .. el SAMUIL New, 24, 1'11 IJTAfl 011 CALl,Oll.llllA •da ps WI pu ac rom ove1u1rew neu ra IS nnc TNe C-OUNf'f' OP OlllANO• STATE OF CALIFOAHIA 1111 City of S•nll Alli, C1Utor1111. MAllVIH IVllGISS, •k• IAMUIL M. P\11111""" 0r ..... C-t DlllY Pllol '"' COUlllTY'Oll OttAN•• Cambodia when they complete Norodom Sihanouk several .... A..un couNTY oF 011.1NGE. ss. 0.1111 AP•ll n, 1J10. av11:oess. DKtl•ld. . ...,.,, .. "· u. •ind Mly 1. 1m .. 1.10 "" a.- h · · f I' · k I "ld E1l1lt of ETHl!"l I PHILLll"S On !Ill• 2'111 d1v of ••rll, A.D. 1111> W. E. ST JOHN, NOiiet; II llel'llW al ...... ll'llt 1111 urt-1:911le of OOllOTHY V. aU111Ce, ... t e1r mission o neutra 1z1ng wee s ago, one genera w D«e•Hd · ' t111or1 -· "'' unc11r111ntd. , No111T ceunlt" c:11·~ °'".,._. wm •tit 11 f'r1v1i. 1111. LEGAL NOTICE c1111d. the enemy in the Parrot's a re...-!ar he would "love lo NOTICE JS llEltEB'( OIVEN to !ht Public tn •nd lo• Nkl CoUl'lt!I 11111 'r'DUNO. ,,.,NNli lt • NIWS le flll ~ltllnt Ind ... , ~. 11;bltd HOTIC:E It H!ltll'f' a1vaN ..... . . f'V',';" . • . c•tdllori of tM ibov• nttntd feadtnl Sl•tt, t1tldl111 l!Mrel n 0.:1" ccmmls51ontd SU Wnt Tlll"ll Slrllt IO cenflrmatlon el .. ~ ""1rllf' CM!, crHlfott of 1111 ..... Nmld dKilliJl!ll Beak which noses into South tear up about 12 miles m s1de 11111 111 "'""" 111v1"' c111m1 •PIMt ind sworn. "'''°"'111Y -•re Gl!lt '"'' Allf. c.1ttor1111 nm on w '""' flll Ullt "'" et Mt,., " .,.. tlllt 111 --"-"•• c111me ~Intl Ille VietMm only 35 miles from the Cambodian border and :::!m1•:11:ec;:.e11:_-:!.:..."u.=,..~ 11~ ::_~so ... t.=-;; ~i:. ":. 'i"t! := i~'tc.!4';:._ ~~ ~ t'!~~ ;. Ct&'~ ,':wt"~.; , c1a'J~1ti\.T:V.°' =~Nin !:1~ :;=.;:, =..\ : = Saigon. Ulat he hoped the new Phnom "'-~flu• of 1111 clerk e1 "" ,be,.,.., 1mtrUll'\tf'lt, 1nc1 Kil"°"'""""' to mt A "r1b~~ °:"'79~.~°''' Dell" :loJo 11:,*...,·· Ct llY el 11n111111:i •i;:l~&uts.:' ""' .,,...,111* deft c..-tifr ""' h _ ti ll'lt cltrll •Ille'°""' en1tt1ti11 eeiirt,,.. H ••· · p ~ t Id ., k tn!ltlttl court, or le P•tfflll !Mfo'I, wr111 11111 lie t•teuttd !flt 11mt. " • 1Y • ' • • AfVeln, 1 ;t tl\Jdl MIMll 1 m w lrlll (lltl to .,_, "*'"' •1111 lflll MC9Ury LJ!:GAL NOTICE owever, .. H;re was no 111-e 1u1 govemmen .wou as 111e necilutrv vouc"""'i. 18 ,,,. un-wJTNESS my 111 .. d 1r'ld oflicl1I "''· 111 .ill r1flll, 11111 Ind 1 .. ttr .. ~ MtM "'c!1tfrornl• ~ "'-rictittW. flml _,_.." w ....._ ...... 11"""""' ... djcation whether this was a for our help to rid the area Hr1!1ntd., """ofOct. ot t>tr 111or11tn: !OFFICIAL SfALI LEGAL NOTICE 11: :'r"~• ,~~, "':t~*":,..o11n .. ~ .. ~ _ . .,HM ..O..i1i:oo1t ltLUMllNO • e1 "" 1llvnfn1 Dlll'Yff, "''"""" _. J ho . h f ~--ba ,. Mtllt• ~ Mc:Ktdlr>l1, 205 &ink al """"'l<t .I, Ll!"I! AOAlll ~II 11'11 -~Ill "'' 111111 WC..ittl 1111 HEA'rlHO tnof lllll llld firm It COft'llNlld llNIH. fl" l!•nHI J. kfllt, Jt',), "21 S one s t operation or t e o 11av;x. ses. •1c1t .. W1111t11r. c1111 ..... 11 t11110t, wlllch wot.,., ,-uenc 111 •fld l'IK Clllllrlcl.., .,.,11"" fl i.w • en-wi .. ., n... 1611ew1111 --. Wl'IOM _ In MKArt!W• e.....i .. ~.t. Otrk:• ... tnc. forerunner of others to com e Given the political climate h 1111 Pllte of bllilnni el' r111 1;nc1M1l•ntd S•ld COl/llt'r •M ste•c T·um :i...., tr1e11 • 1n lddltllll ,. ""'' ..f 1'1M ...,.. 11tcft e1 ... ~If n totriow.: M....., hlcfl. C•ntom11 ""'Wflld! 11 J 1 .. I ll 1'119~ 11ert•l11tnv "' Ille ,,,.,, MY Commlulon E•Plrlt su,1•10• COUlll'r 01' TNI Id *"""' It ""' tif!ll IA tllllll °"'" M.. 1'-' ..,. 1'111111 ....... '"' -'K• el tiulhlllt .. *" """""'""" '" ~ there and in other Nor th Viet-in the United State!. few of of Mid 111ec.o....1. wlfflm """ monlhl Julr, 1t1t st•t• op caLt,OllNIA tto• t: w 10 111 ·""' c'"'°'" 1'111 ...,.,,.; hnti""' • ·• 1n m•ttm .. rt11n1111 11"" .,.tett .. ""' l.. namese occupied sectors in· the generals expected an. '""'"" flP'll Pllbllc•llen"' 11111 notl(t. •. LIE ADAI• THI COUNTY 01" OltAlllOI tl1Ulltf In Ille """"" el °''""· Ii.to O.lltl ,.,II, .. Im dlc9dotnt. wtlllln ...... mMlllt ""' .. ,. l><lled APr11 74, 19111. ."""'' ., l.IW Ne. • ....,. " Ctllfltftlt P1rllUlt1r1Y ftKtllllCI .. 0-M. ...,.,,., fl•ll M tlcltltn " tihlt MID. 1ide C&mbodia proval to sefld any American tlt1el Slylrt ltll Wttkllfl OrWI. Iii" Ht MO'rlC• Gfl HIAltlNO Gii Jle'rtTIOH ......... ie w1ii ..... of C1l1f6nll• Cir•-(_,,.· Dt lttl l.Hll t. 1m othe . red · · ._ C bod" E•Klltrl1 ol llM wln N.-1 hae~. Ctllflnlll IOlt PllOU.TI OP' ltOLOOltAJIHIC Loi 1, ef 'rrKt He etS. 11 tflCllm Oii °""" 14 )t1'. Mfor• fM 1 ·.....,., Wtller W. NII ...... • r unanswe questions troops 1nw am 1a. " "'' •bove """"" .ilQdeflt PutllWlld Or•"" eo.11 0.11.,. J111o1. WILL ANO ..011. i. 1 TT 1 1.1 en 1 fN1' rlClnl..i 111 "* u6, l'VMlc In ..; tor M"I s1111, • ,.,._11y .Eut11tor " "" wtn .. 1111· .-.. •, involved the "rules of But they hoped for sizable MU1tr • Mdlto:Mlt ""'"JO. """' 1, 1., tJ, 1r111 ll06·1'0 "••tAM•H'rAllY '"" ..,, ., .., .., •nd ._ "' _,.... ow.n M. sttmer "-to n'I• _,.. t!KWtnt . •s aillt Of .t.mtrict •wt. EJ11te of C:HAllLES E 0 WA II D Miit~ M,,.. rtC1t1b of Of'llWI 119 1t1 the ..,_ wt.,, -It WllKTlll> OUllYIA. CAlll"lln"lll l9llf IAll:Nll ) engagement'' for •U .S. South Viet.narnese operations ;',~:1t1~·1<•1fforml ""1 LEGAL NOTICE HEHDEll:SON, •k• CHAll LEs E , '-"'· Cltlfornll. .. ,. .,.. wllfllfl 1ne1..-1 •M •.,.1 •••nT '· tcMM, a • elements s unnnrting the South a g a i n s t t h e e n e m y a--! ~~''" 0"',',2!',111~ ..... •~• CHAllLEI HEH-StrMI lddrA1: loll '°"'" H\ll'tll •c•-IHffd lie .. t0:11111 Ille -· uu MMArllilllr llW. ' ' ' ,.,.-. . ' . "-·~·· -P4n N .,.., . ......... . Drlw•. Senti A/II, C1llfornl1. (OFFICIAL IEAL I """"""'°' Clllf. .... V1elrlamese, any geograplucal sanctuanes. with Amen~ ....':.'ft~~ o;•'i:,' ,1c~~ 0111v 1111°1. Cl!ITll'i<•T• 011 •usiN••• NOTICE 1s HEllE•Y GtVfM ,T1111 sei. win " •'*lid 11 curnnt '911••· ~ IC. "'""' ""1 cn•1.m..,,.. I. ·is us l t• f b cku ' " . . ICM-711 ,,CTITIDUS NAMe THOM.AS MOlllllllS l lM k-.. OM c 0 w Ill I " I I ' condltl-. ••trldlollt, No••rv l"Vblk-C1ntor11ll Atlwlliri't "' ........ 1m1 on ' . pene ra Km 0 a p. TM nd I ned doll ctrtlly llllY .... MORll rs II•• filed htr•IPI • lltllflon ,..,,.,.,~, "91111, '"" ........... ''" Ind ~rlnclHI OlllQ In Pl/blllflllll or._ Cttd D1lty ~rr.t. Cambodia the number of A single operation will not LEGAL Ncrt1CE' coric1uc~"' ~ 'b\,.1111111 11 1142 •••di 1or Prot11i. " IHllol•Ullk: Wiii .no .. ~11: of ,_,_ r..... rtllh. or1n11• Ctl.lll!Y AIM'll '· 14 n. •· tt1L •7' ' · th · J · I the J 1&11 1 h c Ill ril• undfr ler hlWlrl(t ef ~,. 'rtllttnlflli,-, °"''""' 11'1111 Mll!llt!llllCI Pllllll••· M" ~1111911 l ul'" • American advisers on e entire y satis Y m. T·SnM ~""'·;:,fi'i!: firm ucn;,.,: :; Eoov•s '' lti. Pllltlontr, AleritrK• io ~lcll 1nd pPtmk/ml IHI 1r1utr1nc1 KC•Plt•lf' NOYWl'llltr ,,, 1m Ntlltt .. Sill .. l•AL ,,.,..,.., 91 COIFFURES .,111 11111 Mid firm 1• tom• '-miO. for lllrtller pirtlclrllP'I. Ind IO ll'lt Plltcl'IMW tlllll Ill P'OlllOll Mltlllltl OrtriH c:ont Dlttr 'lief, 1trlw1i. 1111 ltd ot 1111 lollowlne "''°"' who'' 11111 11'11 lllN •nd •llCtl et llttrlM 11 fl tilt dlt. el fft'Onllna et con-,.,.,U ,., n. JO end Ml'/ ), 1r10 •10 Ne. A..SlJI pol Ille 1111\e II•• beef! set IOI' ,.,,.., IS. 'f'fYll'ICt Siii•' -.tit f\lrnlloll ,, !Mdc:;.:;.;::_;;;;;i.';.'7.'::;;,;;--"-'-1--------------IN THll SVP•111011 cou•T OP' 'rHe Ill.mt• In t11il I nd •l•tt el '"kle11e1 lt1'0, '' t~:io i.m., In Ille courl'rDM! ••PIN•' el ~n..-• tn11 "lier 1111 LEGAL NOTl- • TATI OP CA,IPOIOO• PO• U; It lollow1: et De,o1r1mtnt Ho. 3 ot' 111d COl,ll'f, lllndl"ll forl'll · '-0 ll4ffU TH• CDUNTY OI' OllANGE Chlrltl A. Lew~, IOUS Nl1hll""I' •t 1UO Clwlc CtfllM Oflvt W .. I, In TMIN el 11i;_ CHll In ltwll.ll '"'"'Y ClltTl,ICATll OP 1"91111111 In t1>t 'MUtt of Ille Ei ttle el JASPEll Cir .• Founllln V1lley, C1UI. '·Ille C!lt" of lent1 Ant. C1llternll, f1f f111 Ulllltd Stiln IHI COflflr ..... 11111 ,P47•1 •ICTITIOVI •1•M NAMI • LIKES, OfcHsld. Oclro!Plt" L. Uw'°"1. ICM4S Nltllll"'1"" Dlltd AJll'tl !I, 1910. ef .... , er H rt cnll •lltl blllnct Clllfl,ICAfl 0111 IVllNSU 'r)'IE UNOl!llllGNIO tie ....,..., Mollee Ii twtlw t lven !flit !ht u,,_ Clr .• Founl1l11 Vtlln, CtUf. W. E. ST JOHN. Cettnt,-Cllrlil; 1Ykltl!Cld .... llOll 11C11rftl '°I' Mwtlltl l'ICTITIOVI HAMI . certify tlllt """' 1r1 atlllluc:ll111 1 rtteN LEGAL NOTICE Newest Youth Fad dtraltntd Wlll H U •I Prlv•ft 1111 01tltd ""r!I ,., l9l0 0111110.1 l . SflltMllllS, Jlt. or Trutl °"' IHI Ille .... nv .. ""' 1;ndtr1llntd ..., <•"'"Y """ .... Mlnen ,, u Tiie Clt'I' ltl•u '°""'· City to 1111 lllt hell incl btll blOdtr iubftci Chtrlet A. LiWllln OATl!S, MOllllS, MlllltlU tolll. Ten Ptre'"I f/f 1ni.unt tif.i ti c.ond11cllnt1 1 blllllltll 11 22l1 Ptell1c II 0rl"91• CaunlY fl( Or1net, Sl1l1 It "' (Dn!I !ton of Id Suo kir C r1 DorclllY L. l t-n a S'rl,MINS Ill flPOlllt'CI wllll bid Aw., Cotti Metl, C1llloml1, undlr 1111 C:tllfornfl, lll'lflr Ille lk""-""'"' "'"" on or •:;:,, lrit ~3th 1111'; ef :..; STATE OF (ALIFOJINIA, 411 Sell!~""""'· 1111 .. '" 81ds ., on.-. to . k \II wrn1111 1M fktlllow tlrm lllmt of 'rHI! SUH MAIC£1t of"TMt: SWIU COLONY l'rottl '1. l'ftl lf7G t i lftl offlce of YOOllHEES. ORANGE COUNTY: bel LM A1111ll1, Ctffl, ttfl7 will Ill rtetlwlMI 1t ltll ,,.,... .. lffl(t CO, OISIONS tilf' till! 11tll llnn It 11111 MN llrm Ill <Oll'llllMlll ., tllt ........ ICN~8LE 1. VOORHEES :nlltl H•Wll>orl!I 0 11 ""'rt 21, lt1'0, e<'t •~ -,· ... ' Tlf1 1'1JJ 41MI• 11 lfl'I 11 ..... Ifft • 1111 llt'91 publlClllM tomllOlltl of Ille follow("' "'"°"'' """°" 1111 ""'°""' W'*t 1'141-Ind ...._ i~Results in Hanging 8 ltv ' No!IN Jl11bllc In 1nll for SI"' I•••• AllWNl'/I "" Jltlllltfltr Mrfol er'ld titletl .i1.. .. 1111, Tiit "'""' In 11111 •1111 l l-f11 ~ltlt~ Ire H fl!OIWI, .. wit: SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) Perry, the son or a pro-"',,., Lo!"· ... :."~~" ~·"~Dl"r;-ncec.~: person1liY .i•pettf<! Clll•ln A, LIWIO!I PutlUlllltl °''"'' et.11 01llY Jlllof, """"~ ftHr'ln "" r10tit ,. r•lltt .,. •• tollowl: lt•Y Mlffllll. -Wftf P'lllllt ~ -Perry Lybbert was describ-m i":ient Salt Lake City at-f05DJ 111 "" rllht 1111e •"" 1_.,, •1111 DDl"Dlllv L. L•-k110¥1n 10 -~u-. Mn 1, '· 1'10 11~10 '"" 11111 111 b!oh. ltfllflltl Ht!lllr. tnr ~Kllk •-· lllYlf'lltlt, C•tffrlt'nl• fl901 • of '1.i .i • "" t lo bt Ille lttlD!IS wllott nema ... Otltll lllli ?Otll -'1'1 et Aprll, 1t7'.' COlll Ni-eN C1~rorn11 H•tTY J . L•""""' "" ltl'I'""'"' ed as a curious youngster, torney and his wife -Mr. '"" .. •II =·~ltti;t 111111 ~°';n:':i •utiJcrlbtd lo'"' wltftlft s'1~u-nt tnc1 LEGAL NOTICE Jn111 N, •11f'9111 s1111 w1,;...,. 71>2 ll1ellk: A ...... Ne. A.,.. .. CMI• Mew, c111f1¥l111 tM2' and hi·, !r1'ends said ·-had nd M s M li R L bbert that Ille ,.t.it .,· Mild dece•tM "'' Kknowl~ '""' tllKllftol ....... A.dt11lrtlllr1trl• el llM .,... •• COlll MIN. Ctllletnl1. WITNE~S -"""' !hit ICllftl • .,. 9f l~ a r . er n . y ke1.11rtd ""-•lllon "' llw or""" It !OFFICIA L SE4LI " Mii O.C9tllnt Dltld Alrlt :l'O. 1'1CI. April, lf?O t l ht adventurous tendencies -died in the restroom of """' w.n or 111 add111.... '' 111':1 !; ~= ~Uti~~ c1111o...,11 SUPlll.IDll. cou1tT o• THI ~~ •., ":"' •• It. """•' ::,'~!:_. .. r d · 7 JdS the y lie y · F ' st W d Hkl °'KtlHd, II 1111 llm• ol Oetlh, Ot c ,.1y STA'rl Ofl CALIPOll:NIA l'Olt 1111 S.m Wtr,... IT Tf oun In so many .year-0 . a y 1ew 1r ar In I nd le •II illf (frlllll ... _,"" lnft (Ill IE I JHll COUNTY Ofl OllAM•I ,, o ..... IMO l l•t•" C1Hlor1111, Or-Coulltl: ... ()fl CA.Lll'OlilNIA Perry Is dead the victim of the Church of Jesus Chn'st 111u11tt1 in 11om1'1 SMdv ••• c""'""' ,,.,,. eomm11•lo!I •Pre• N1. ._..,. se1111 "' '"'""' c111t. ,...,. o~ N•tl l'O 1t111 before "" 1 coutnY Oii 1tlVE1tl10I! ' ' er °''""· s111, fl C•lllornl•,. TO BE .. ~·11 n. 191' lllOTIC• Ofl HIAll:INO 01' ,ITl'rlOM 'rtt1 11111 Uill¥tAllY .. t7• NOlllT ,vblk '1n -tor Mid sill.. ON TMll ltnlll -''"el ..... ~ a.o .• ~ of a freak hanging accidc11t of La l t er. D ll y S8lnls SOLO AS A UNIT p1rtk:11l•rlr lkK•!btd "ubllll!f<! 0•.,-COlll Oellt .~~~!: jll(llt ,llD•ATI Ofl WILL AlllD l'Ollt AflwJlt.,. .... A~lllllllltrmi• D•I• Piiot ,.._..u., ,_,.., It. H•vter '""' ""' ......,. ""L .. H. M"""'. ""'"' Pvltll( r th r • (M ) n hllltwu. -II: APrll .)(I. Ml" 1, U. 71 , 1t1U .v LITTallS tllS'rAMINTAllY • PWUll'lttl Orin" Clld • Wi rAn k-to 1111 lo Ill .... ,.,_!ft Ind let Mlrll Clllnty Ind llele, rwldlllll resulting rom e "latest ad' ormon • llAll:CIL 1: Loi U In "TrtCI f!7. -E1llll ol llESS HAllTIGAN, 0tcu1•. Aprll U. 1 .. ID. 19111 7&2·7' W11eMi M"'" ''' t~ to !I'll ltil!'lln ti!;!" c\m!'ll~IOl!ttl Ir.II •-"· among grade school children He had attended the opening In llomt'' &111dv 1roo11, counl'I' of LEGAL NOTICE NOT ICE IS HEllE•v GIVEN 'rMI wtlfllll lnltnHl'Mllt w •tt:nowt•dald """"'*",. • '•..,•-"', H•r,., J. U.Sllilllt. . . . Or•not, Sltlt ol Cllllornl1, 11 111Dwn MAJITHELLA llANOALL 11M l!lttl l'lfrtl" 1•1Culltl 1i1t tllml, I l'I ""' _,, '9 "" ft tit ~ in this Utah capital city. ceremonies prior to going to ..., • m10 ~ In e'* )l). ,.Jnn • per111°"' 1or prObtte et w111 11111 LEGAL NOTICE co•,1c1AL JEAL) ",.... ..._. 111""' ,,.. •lillKrlbllf i. He W's found hangl.ng from h. pn·mary church school P11H 31 fl MlJC:•ll•n-M1p1, RtUJ..i1 c111,.1,1ca'rl 1111 co1t,01a"111H ttt111 tor 111ut11« e1 Lttter11 T1111mtn11,., •• H. Clnttlt "" wllfllfl 1n11rvmen1. •nd Kl!nowltdll4I IS • DI Or1ntt CounlJ, C1lllornl1. 'rllANSACTIGH Ofl aUSIHlSS UNDall Iv lllt pelltlolllr, r1f1r111ee ill wll lcll Hef1ry l"ultllc, Cllltornll to P1111 llWll lllty ll!tc1;lld Ille Mlll'lt. a towel rac k in the r estroom class and told bis teacher he PAllCIL !: TM Wnlerlv ,., OI P'ICTITIOUS NAMI It mode lor "'"''"' p1rt1cu11rs. Ind ~ ... ,... Pr1MIH1 Otl!Q Ill IN WIJNESI WH~ltEOI'. I "'"' h h I ed t th t of A, Tr1d '57, •dloln1nt Loi 13 THE UNOERSIGNEO CO llPOllATION 11111 the !!mt •fld pl1c1 01 llnrlna Cllfl,tcATI 011 CDllf'OttAT!ON POii Or-. Clunl'r llemlllle Ill 111'1' Miid •nd •flti• my of. Of is ChUrC -the towe want 0 go tO e r es room. IHI Ille 1!11t, IYlne btlwten 1111 Nortrit•I" doer. fttftl)\o cerlltv 1111t 11 15 conduct!fte !ht Ml"'I M$ """ Kl for M1y f, TIAfrlfACTIOlll OP 8UllNlll UNDla Mii Cemmlltlon E•il,.. flc::l~I ':1111111 ::. ,,. Yur In ti'lllo wrapped tightly around his Seven 1-o 10 minutes later 1nct Selltl'llrlv Hnt1 of ••Id Lot u • bll•lne" 1oc1rt11 •' 7IDO L•l•••ll• 1'1D, 11 •i:io 1.m., in 111c cwmoorri J11CT1T1ou1 MAM• 1111_.,., ,., 1,n j~~~ ,..f:' • WI'"'"' . ' If Mid Nor'IPIUIJ •nd Soulhtrlt" lint• $1rtt!, N,w11<1rl Be1ch, C:1lllor11l1 uncl1r ol 0.111rrm1nl Ho. J ef llkl courl, THE UNOl!!ltSIONl:O COlill"OllATION Pvbttitlld OrtnM CO..I h ltr ~llot l M Mt...... neck, his breathing cut off, when the youngste r failed to wire •~ttndld 1n 1n 1E11s1r1,. .i!A<tlO!l. 1111 11c1111ou1 n .... ,....,, o1 OELA~ev 11 100 c1v1c cent..-Ori~• we11, Jn doll l\el"lb'I' c1rtifY' 1t1e1 11 It ctflll00•111 At>rtl :n. •· Mw ,, 1., 1910 1M-1' N:,,.y ll'u&lk; . c llftr 11 • h is life gone. s how for class the teacher Lot 10 111 Tr1et •sr, 111 11om.•t 1110s. FJtOZEH Fooos en.i 11111 11111 '"' c11y fl S1nt1 "'"'· c1utc1r"11. 1 tHltlPIH• 1oc.i1t1 tt un WHtcllff "'"""'" "ceun~ • n • Sh1dw 8rorik Sllv1r1clo C•nven r11 !flt firm 11 com11D1td ol lht lellowl"' tGr· Oelld April U, ltJU. Orlvt. N1wp0rt ltlCll. C1Hhlr"ll' Uf'ldtr LEGAL NOT!-" The fad~ It s tem t d sent a playmate to gel hlm. couni'V or Or1nge, s1111 et c~ntorn11, PDl"•llon. wtlaH orlnc!HI ""~• or w. E. ST JOHN, Ill• tldltlWI 11rm "':ne f/f MAITI '-O ~:, C~:'ltn llltll'll h I h d. t Th J ._ d ' ed It lllown o~ 1 ma" rtc:or.iM! In bullnu1 h 11 lotlowt: Cou~ly Cltrk 111d trlll t11d llnn It COi'!\""" el ,-bll Md ~ ' C 1 Dlll l'lllf ann ess enoug • accor 1ng o e P ayma«:: 1scover eoo11 JO, PIH ,. 01 Mlscili.MOU• otrent"!' '""· ~· Foecl co. nnc.l, 11AT1t1c1A HllllOO ..,. 1oi1ow1ne cor..,.•llon. w111n prlncl111 ,._,,.,. · •~11111 ~ oet ~ Capt. George Nielsen, com· Perry hanging from the towel MIDS ol O••ntt Cou~l'I'. C:1Ulornl1 nao t.111wtnt Sl•ttl. N•Wl>!)4'1 8ttc:tl, u .. Int CIHI tlltllwl'I tl1ct" bUllnt•• II •• leltew" ClllTt,ICAfl Olt IUSINllS ...,.! •• ,,, • • Mip 7, lml ..,.. , mort '1lrnrnlHllt" tinown 11: .CUI Soulll C:•lllornl1 92660 Ct-ftl Mir, C.rffernll Mltl• Advtrtl1ln1 kn'lc"' lllC,. •tCTITIOUI NAMI mander of the Sall Lake Coun· rac k uncon.sc1ous, ran and w11dc11 c1n'"°"· sn,.1,111e, c 1111e,n11 WITNESS Its 111nc1 thk 11 t11" et T•h us.1014 -1501 wntctlff .,, • .,.., Mewl'Oft 11te11. Tht """"1011tt1 • c1rt1tv llHl'I' ,,, J ·1 o· . . lerled h' I h ho . 'rtrm1 ol "" c11ft In llwlul ..... u. ltJU .""""" "' '"'' C1Utof11t1. COl'ld!;C:tl .... Minn• •I 11• l"lrktr 1y uvern e 1v1s1on. a IS eac er w in "' lllt unute1 511,K Ol'I 11 "",':; o.1111tY 11•111. 111 l'"DOCI ce. ,..,.,.1,Mc1 Or•ntt: coe11 Oollly l'no1. WtTHE!S 11, !lend '"'' JOth -'•'I' et 11 .• Or••· c.111orni., .,... 1,1Mtr "'' LEGAL NOTICE The child sticks his head tum got the dead youngster'I "' ••It. DI" P•'' c11ft ,<,;' ;::!\(. 11nc.1 A11•11 n. '"" •· 1''° m-io Merell. 1110. 11ct1t11M.11 firm "',.... tf CUS'rOM 1H·1------.,-,.,,,,..------ th f h I tvldtnc:td b-t note oecurl'd b~ Merit_,, Nick Otl1'"'y, (COlll:JIORATIE SEALI TfllllOlt DESIGN Ind !fie! Mid tlm'I ,.,... lhrough the sling hanging mo er rom anot er part o or 'rrus1 oee<1 en "" 11,._.,., ,. ,.,,,, LEGAL NOTICE Mllrlu M'lf'rtl1llll '' ('Ol'llOOMlf " "" totlDwlflll ,..._, c111T1•1caT1 °" au11NllJ from the towel rack, and then the church building. ::1~ 11'!::.1,:;·wr:i'1o1 •1 -1 blO ~~trt~i ~:.!'(11 .,.011 NtA. ~4,... ~':'~:; ~'"· ,,...1*"' :C:nc:"=:' 81 1:'...~: •M '41<t1 °' ,.... lllMI;,~~": ~~ 111 111 _ swings around and around Un· "Kids can find the strangest 8k11 or e11 •• , to "' t~ ... 111111 • ..,, COVN'r'f' OF ORANGE. •t. ClltflfllCATr o• 1u11111•t• STATE oF CALIP'OJtHIA. llltitrt L. ·-It. 76'3 Orlon s1 .• tlllclllll • """'-.. UM •• Ctottt ti! •• gets "di-y or 1-11·ng thi t ·do" 'd Capt Wiii bt rKtlt"od ., "" lfM•••ld effl<• Oft tllk 11 dlw of .... 11. A.O. 1'70. fllCTITIOUS NAMI COUNTY 01'" OllANOIE,... Vtn Hun. Clllf. '14N Hllllwl'I. lultt ,,. c--.. IMt-. I~ -..... O@:S 0 • sa1 ' ., ...., tlm1 '""" tilt ll•lt ..aifkttlon lttfort '"' • No11rv Jlutillc In •nd Tiit l;Mtt1~ tlotl Ct•lll'I "-Is Oft !Ille )Oii! -''' of Merell. 4.D. ••Ill 1:'111, Ull s. C!lt\"I' CMIM Ctl1loml1 • .,....,.,.. "" fklltllut """ ""'-silly," said the captain. Nielsen. "f.faybe we c an alert "'rltof ''"' btfor• d•tt o1 1•1t. for ukl counw 1M 5111•· ,.,kfl,.. conc1....,11111 , 1out1-11120n •r80kllut'1t. 1m blfoN ine. • Nt'lllT ,11bllc In Dr •• Ollflct11t, C•Hfllr'nl• ruo. fl U.CHANOE LOCK MtlMS S:'"' , . 011eo 1~11 !US div el Allrll, ltn. ""9t1ln. dull c"""'l'l&ktntd •1111 -"· Gtrdlft Gr1Ye. ci11torn1i , ilSlllMr 11\f •1111 fer uld c_,iy '"" 111!0, --11~ Oer.W Ml!Ylfl hnnett, tttt1 fovc1n 11141 nrm II '°"""°"" ., Ille tr. "Several of the young people parent! to the posslb1bty of Gllllt•t 111rrli pe.-.111" •Ht••ld Nkk C'tltnt'I •-r1cut1e1is 11"" ..._ of CAIPET ·-•retl c.r1 o-.. ~-~ i. '"' c1rc11, •turr111ft v111..,, CIUfe..1111 '27-,..,__ ""'*'' ~"" In tult •nd IA ... talked to have told u s the" c hildren part· · a" In Piu!lne 0 Divli to "" te ht "'-Prtikltnt fl 1111 CEHTElll 1!11!1 1111t 111111 tlrm II~ le tit Ille Jlnlkltlll el "" -''"°" DI,.. ""1I 11• ''71 mldlno:I II •• tollowt· Ir , lCip .,ng Admlnl11rf1or1 C.T .A. et 1'1s (Ol'jilO<ltJon lhll PKVlf<I llM wllltln el Ille ttt!lowl"' "'"°"' wllltt 11411111 11111 IXKU'tl.i Ille wlllllfl lnlf-111 WI It ..... L. hllllllt Rlld S.'(111. lllt 0cotn atvt1 .. C#Me it is being done in school fads of this type. E91••t o1 11kl 0eceo::11111 1ns:r11f!llfll on """,.' '"•"' <~•·~ lft fun '"" •I•<• ., l'ellOlrw:t a •• btMll .. 1111 cor"''"'" """..,. "'"""'' ~ :-= •--dtl """'· c1111em•~-b th Id bo •t !.-'d "Wh does the llf of YGOllKll!J, ICMA8La I ""''I" MrMd, I K llOW.....,. fe!lewl• 11111 tdcnl'#lldtltl hi 11\t 11111 l\ICll • • .,.....,. Otlelt .V.ll 1 Im, y e 0 er ys, ·~ Sil ' y e a VGOllNllS '"' lhtl WC~ '°'"'''Ion '~""'" "" Jvhn c W1ll#I fQ' Ctl!IHI. .,.,,,,_.. (eorl'IN'lllen nlCV!ff "" .. __ Sttll ol C.lltetnl1, Lot A•t• Gel.m!Y1 ltftlil ...Vie. "All we can do Is assume child have to be destroyed~.!!"":!:'~;,,..,"'· 111 Mr::'.witntll Wtitrtof. 1 111.,.. Mrt11111o 8t1CI!, c:i111. ' fOl'l'IC~,.!l!~Ll1tMOn N!!:rv ";'~1c1''1n 1~'!; :"":.1ct!'l\:;1tt~ 1t11e o1 C-•llforftl1. °''"" c11111tv1 that's what P erry was trying before kids and their parents "" M.N s• 2-sN1 ~• m" "'r'lll •r'lll 1111.t.i m,. o111ct11 °•t1c1J=1~21w~r:· "'°''" ,-Ut,1k. ciu11r>111 P1'"M1'14111Y • ..,_... 11ot11rt L. ''"""'', o."11c "'i!11 !;,1:: ~11:'• • ,..,i;: to do •.• foll.w the .'.mple beco I the d Allt"'"''.., Mmlnl•tr•i.ri '''I "·• -'''" lr'lll '''' In 111i. <1rt111c.as• Sith! of c.ntofnr1, Or•nt~ C:Ollnl'l'i PrllldHI Olllce fr1 hlll V• •Ml Glr11d Mtlvln hftlltll ~erttl ,t_llttl a...,i!: ,_ t. i::;'-. me aware o angers c.T.A. _. "'-'""'•I .. i.i fKNllll ftr11 •bov• wrnrtn. 011 ""'11 11 1979 Mtett "" • Gr•lll• countv kritwn 1e "" 1e 111 1111 .,..,_ """"' Ille Plrien wm.. IWlml 11 WlllUlllM ._ set by the older boys. in the 'games' they play?" A"r1b~~ Ot1•~t11j:o111 0111,. Pi1o1. COFFICtALL!!:~~ • ,..,.,,,ft Mot•.,. ll'ublk: '111 ,,..d flor ""' si11e, My commluloll 1!!•~1r.. r,:.":;.:,,.~,..i:,~~:,J"',,...,"'1:~~ 1111 wivir11 l11tlPVl'llll'lf tnd ~ -===========================~lc'c'.'-c..' ;';;";;;'';';'-";C,'";;;;;;;;;;-C"':::..c·to '1c: c 1>eri.on111v •l'DNrtd Jollft c. W11111 k110Wn Atrlt 10, "" lillld 1111 111 •lflCutttl,1111 wme. r ;!:.'ii~':! •. ; •11~1111 lo m• Ill llt Ille ""°" wllOu MIN AO.lMt, OUOUI a MAllLTINI. ~fll'ICLA~·H'ALl (OFP'ICIAi. SEAW LEGAL NO'l1CE Mt" C:ommllllon e1111,., It i~bscrlbed lo lllt within 111111vrr""' Atttnltn loorin ,.til!l'" • Andf'l'w s. Jtfl- I See by Todays Want Ads e TI!ROW·BACI< to the Mina Dynut,y: pure-bf'l!d PE- KJNGF.SE puppies, 6 .. 1.-ttkll, males, I.ti eacll. e Al the tnd of the rainbow In colon, kine 1he1 hl.nd titd DECORATOR. uu .,.... ....-colon, .... and pritt1, •You 1Upp\y U>e br11tn, 11 does tJ" rest lBM 11tl~ rnc lypftwrilt:r,' ne-&rly new, 2 typinf bftll1, $350 • F.ti 2s, ltn llld 1ck110wi.offd ht t•tciltllf 1111 11m1, J2I 'l\'MI 61tt tll"llf HOitry ,ilDI C>Ctllfer!\11 NfllPY lll,ltlll(.(tllfel'llll p bll Md o;,net Cotll Ol!IY f'llol (0\l'PICSAL IEALl I.ff "-Ill. Ctllfrtnlll fltlt L• Allltl• Gollnl'Y ,rllldlllt omc:. In U 1 ' Mtrv k . Henrv T"'2U My CommfHlln I p!Nt Or•-County. AP•lt JO, Ml'I' 1. U, II, 1910 IU-10 Nollr'I' Pubtlc-C•lllernlt PublllMl:I p......,. CotJI DIU" Jlllof, All'l'll ~. ltn x M'I' CommlMlwl b•f,.. ,,,nc:i.11 Olllc1 In APrH u. ,,, Miii ,, '" lf79 7»1'11 ,....., ,lJrll I~. ltn Or•r111• C:ountr llub111Pl9d °''"" c-1 0.111 1trr.t. l'\lblltllef or.,.... ~-0.1"' ~•lb!, ""'" com1111'''°" £-tt'" i:':":"c..,::.;'°::.:""~~·::::•:•~•:•c•:......,-':'c''c"+ .. =..''c' c'·-'c"c':'...;."'c...'"'...;. ____ ...;.,..~" Ho...,,,M• ,., t•n LEGAL NOTICE ' ,. Publlihld 0rlftfl CH11 Oll1" "llol, APrt1 n, 30. MIY 1. 14, 1t1' r,,,.111 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LIGAL NOTICI ' ! ' . II DAll.Y P1lOT SC Y-r Monetf'' OVER THE COUNTER Coinplete-Nelv York Stock List Mail Order Sales Flourish NfW 'l'OllC l~).o 'TJlur..U"'• c°"""'tr lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllCl .. .,H•w Ytt'k Jlldt ~tti."" lriCtt: ,o:.. "'-" Lft' '""" ~ . ... • • . • .,, TlllY eu.NT. l .Pll For a long time there ,.,.as little that could be done to help people suffering "'1th Parkinson's Diaeue. Stem- ming from a chronic dis- order of the central nerv· ou1 syitmi, its symptoms &re a shaking palsy, slow- ~ of movement and 1tlU• enlng of the muscles. l\'e1e Preslclent Justus C. Gilfillan heads Kaiser Aelna's Rancho California project in southwest Riverside Prize NASD Ll1t1.P ,., W~•r. April 2', 1'70 pH Now a drug Y.ith the funny sounding name of L-DOPA appears to be helpinr; people with Parkinson's to improve ,reatly. A1though still being tested, lt ha."1 bef!n recom- mended that the drug be re· leased for use by physiclana: and It ishould hr available around the middle of this year. Your doctor knows about this. Oldest lnstru1nent Hunted YOU OR YOUlt DOCTOR CAN PHONE US wh•11 vou 11••d • d•llw•ry. w. witl d•li¥tr pro!l'lptly witho ut •xh• eh1r9•. A 9rt1I flllllY people 11ly on u1 f•r tftelr h11lth 11e1d,, Wt wtol• eo"'e 11qu11h for d11i¥1ry 11ri• lc:o 11'14 eh1191 •ceounh. PAii 1100 PHAlMACY 151 H"Pltol 'loed Nnp«t .._. 642·1SIO _ ... ....., The DAILY PILOT- The Ono Thet C1n1s Beckma n lost.rumen~ Is looking kir the oldest pll meter still in use. Celebrating its 35th An· niversary as a company and as the oldest manufacturer of pH meters, the firm is of· fering a prile of a new Digi tal pH Meter to the owner or the oldest Beckman pl! meter in operating condition. Ad· ditional prizes will be awarded to 34 runners up. Closing dale for entries IS June 30, 1970. The winner of the first prlte will be flown to_the corporate headquarters 1n Fullerton, to receive bis new meter while other ·winners will be honored hy the company's local sales Now!PSA • .everv m1nulesto Oakland! 7!15 1m lo t :CS pm. Both Wlp. 1:1W:CS-10:t5-11 :45 •m-1 :t5·2:4S·4:15·S:C5·7':1$ ... :CS pm. Mew• on weekends • 111y•c:ltt active weir for men and boyt not just lcielt w14r flares! -- "!Jlarket S11uabob • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • ' ' • • • ' • • " ·• " .. .. • " " • " .. ' " " .. '• • ' " " ' " .. ' •• " " • '• " " •• " " " '~ " ;: '• '• " '• .. " " '• " .. '' " " .. .. .. " :i "• " ' . .. '; •• .. .. '• .; " " " ,, " " .. .. .. " •• " •• " " .. >i ., '• •• ·~ 't " ,, '• " '• ' " " " " " " •• " •• " .. " . ' " " .. " " ~ " " " " .. ~ ~ " ~ ,. ~ .. • • .. • • " ., • " • " • " ., • .. ThutJdty, Aprll 30, 1970 SC OAILV PllOT ~ 11 ' -'--------------------------------~-------••. 1 . ' ' ~ I • . · .. , • I • ~ ,. ~. APtll 30, 1170 I• I -I... . One'"s outlook may depend on one's aq.te or min«L But a he.all.hy •:p8.ir of eyes·en~u.res ~healthy view of the wor,d-1.i~r?J:Jy. · , P.roper functioning of the eyes, which is easily taken'for granted, can be helped by·taking, tbe best possible·care of them~ A yearly ...checkup_of the-eyes is a 'sensi ble pfoced.are. Arid this•shm.ild:-be a thoroug1t examination by a fully.:trained o'phthalmblogist-ukihg;tbe proper instruments. He can not onl:i· check defects :in. sight and 'prescribe eyeglasses if neededr but· he can .spot dise&ses rsuc.h a!l ·glaucoma and cataracts. Glaiicorili)for 'fil"ample,.]s.a,seri.ous,"non- .reVezs.01e ailment eveiltllally~causiD.i DlindnemJ; it.is est.iDiat.ed.'that two to three per· cent of all -Ame1'i.cans•oven40 have.an unde;tect~d gla~c9iµa condition: FOr tliis, .as fQi: Cataract.'!, ell.iy dia.gnosis is ''ery important, for the con-ect·medicatiOnror su'rgery, if·necessary, can 'Belp both these conditions' jn the incjJ,jfnt st.ages. IJ:lhe eye lest is in".aluable in another wa y: many diseases ol the central nervOus system and manY .gener.al diseases. betray them· selves thro.ugh some eye trouble. The main-warning signs are head· a'cbes, blurred vision and p3inful'inftammaj,jon of·the eyelids. The 1tat.e of health of' the eyes.ahd· of the' body in general influence each other so muc;Ji.tbat ihe ophthalmologist will begin by asking far • fall medical history. Tho ph<itographs on this page show the mtiin atepo in tho reri of an •J78 test demonstrated by Edward P. Perley, MJ>., attending 1urgeon at Manhattan E:i-and Ear Clinic, N.Y. Rofrl,Clion lot~ wilh trio! framH Md........, lo meas- uroYl...r 0-, (Md lo cot· reel, ll ..,.....,., by pr• 1criptloa of.eyegl11111). '· ' Lower left, direct furldoscopy, to study the interior of the eye for pathology; Right1 indirect runi:loscopy. Th e eye is the only organ of th"e body whose in· terior is easily visible with conventional instruments. Slit lamp "."ICl'OICOpy,.for the study or the.antei'ior segment of the i ye • Applanlltlon tonometry, to ~,.. the f>l'"'Ur9 of the •ye, for lhe de19ctlon of glaucoma. A11 ophthalmologist is a ph_vsician 1t·ho .~pe· cialize1 in. the itudy and treatnient of defect s and diseases of the eyr. An optometrist 111eusurcs visual pawer1 and prescribes leiwes. A1i optician makes spectacle l,tnses.fr om presCriptions. Indentation tonometry, using a ShJob: tonam- ettr,aleo for lht detection of glaucoma . Vi1u1I field study on the ta ngent screen (wilh one".~,. rltask.td)', as a test of peripheral and central vision.· ' ' L -f...C. .. I" ... • Goldwate1~ • Cheered At Cal State By JACK BROBACK .. Of ,... EMii~ ..... , ll•ff Senator Barry Goldwater met tbe dissidentl -and mote than J,000 other 1ntertsted Cal State Fullerton atudents and staff mcmbers-Wedne.sday. 'Ibere were no riots, ooly a few catcalls and interruptions, and much applause. Sen. Goldwater arrived en campug at 12:90 p.m., a half hour late. He apologized, saying headwinds held up his plane. He spoke without notes for about 20 minutes and then answered questions for about ts minutea. The dimidtints-about 20 who gathered ln the f~t of the crowd as Goldwater spoke from the balcony of the CoJlege Commons dormitory buildlng-dleered loudest when ~e senator said: ••From lM& to the late 1950s this country entered into 57 mutual protection treaties and 17 of them call for us to go ·to lrar. · · At that point, he was interrupted by a · raucous cheer. "( don't know how to interpret that," be said of the yelling. Goldwater continued, "We came-out of World War II with a position of World leadership, whether we like it or not. · "'The question now before us ls whether we can retain that world leadership. It is a simple quest.ion, even you can . answer it It is wi\ether we want to live in a world dominated by slavery or a w<rld dominated by freedom." Thu"4.ll', April 30, 1970 ..,. " ' s • <}Down tlae ' ' Mission .,.-, • Trail·.· New City Hall Entrance Blocked : 0 • J SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -The ...., • city hall might have to have 1 helicopter " pad. • One 01' the dly COUllCilmen joidngly suggested it at the last meeting, but nobody Is laughing. To dale the public bas no right to use the only entrance to the site, located between the rallroaCI tracks and the Flood Control Channel adjacent to Consolidated llDct Products lacWty oU ' Del Obispo. The dly's employes .,. Included ho an old eastment but the public b not. In the meantime, Mayor TOny Forster has appointed a special committee in- cluding Councilman )llll Bathgate, At.o torney John Dawaoa and Engineer Jack Kubota lo meet wHh the property owner'• attorney. • e Viejo StriM•ers .r-.. • MISSION VIEJO -The Nadadores, t the Mission Viejo Recreation Center's swim team, took top honors in the Spring Southern California Amateur Athletic Association's Class C swim meet Jut Saturday. Leader of · the dissidents wu Jim c1ea1r, chairman m the Student Mobiliza- tion Committee at Cal Slate Fullerton. He bad bis face painted and a large American flag painted on bis back, with a few obscenities inscribed on his arms. SENATOR GOLDWATER ANSWERS QUESTIONS FROM AUDIENCE AFTER HIS TALK WEDNESDAY AT CAL STATE FULLERTON The swimmers, compeUng against swim clubs from all over Callfomta, ~pla!bed their way to 44.l points, winning four out of five age group plaques. At ooe point, while Coldwater was answering questions from the audience, Cleair tried to gain access to the balcony. He .was held off for a time by student leaders and wtren he did confront Goldwater he Invited the senator to sup- port the student defense fund and 90Jd him a copy of a magazine with nude photos of radical leaders, male and female. The senator paid '2 for a copy. At one poiQ.t d!!rlng the question and answer period, Bob Sandoval, student body president, took the microphone to isay, ''There is a small segment on this campus trying to tell the entire &tudent body what to say and do.,. Sandoval was roundly cheered by most Of the audience. He was referring to the catcaUs of the dissidenU during the question period. Here are &ome sample questions and Goldwater's answers: Q. (From .a girl) What are we going to do to insure the rlghU of the maj<rity versus the rights o£ the J1lilitant . ortty• mm • A. I agree with the right of dissent, bUt they are doing it the wrong way, abusing their rights. Yale University '1j:xt't solve it. U I was president of Yale I would close the school. t:<l· Why do we have to be a world 18'1:der? :_A. We got Into Warld War Il because we were weak. Hit1er would never have started the war if we had been strong. ;<Q. What about involvement in Cazn. biclia? ·1A. We shoold send oo armed forces bl1t could supply them with small arms add ammunition. :-q. What is your opinion or the young p;ople today? , ·i\. 'nlis is the best generation we have had in our lives, but we will a.bvays have IOme dissidents. · Q. Why not fight communism here and at Berkeley instead of in Vietnam? A. I am not convinced that these )'OUll( people down here (the dissent group below) are influenced by Com- munism. ~ HAND PAINTED, DISSIDENT REACHES FOR RECOGNITION Bontecl by Frl1nd11 Ht Offers Goo.y Greeting to Goldwater . , . . . . . . . : . . \. ~ . ' \ . ~ ' .. , ' . . . ·, ': . ··: . . . .• .· Q OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY, SERVICE v. COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR •rings sized end repaired·· • diemonds. end precious stones remounted •pearls restrung WE CUSTOM DESIGN I MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY HAUOR SHOPPINe CINTU noo HAUOR m.YD. / COSTA MW 145-MH ''Tho Store That Confidence Built" o,_ M-Tinn., Fn. TII ' p.m. I ' ~ ' HUNTINIHON CINTU HACH.• IDINMR HUNTINliTON llACH HZ-5501 • ' i '' ~ ·• " ', I• 1.-··· .' (· ... · ... ·.-·. • :'\''' (••,, ' • ' • Ir';" • ~ • • ' • Meri Hicks Designated As Scholarship Finaltgt-. Meri Berniect Hicks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Hicks of San Clemente, ha s woa the National Merit Scholarship Finalist honor . Finalist rating Is based on "dislln&ulsh- ed academic performance and ability, leadersh.iRJecord, personal achievement&, school officials'' characterization of the contestant, and NaUonal Merit Scholar- ship program test &e0res." Meri is the only finalist in the three Top Racers Listed Keith Lemberg and John AJlable won San Clemente High School 's weekend car rally, running the 188-m.ile course through back country Southern C&lifornia in three hours and 55 minutes. Rick Just was co- ordinator of the event. south Orange Coast high schools: Laguna, Mission Viejo and San Clemente. She was also the only semi·finalist. Of the 40 atudents competing in the National Merit competition from Mission Viejo HJgh, five won letters of com- mendation for superior achieven1ent. The commended students are Ellen Bork, Ramona Brandt, Timothy Vander Haar, Russell Miller and Janice MuntzeL Similarly, Laguna High's 1970 class has five commended students, Hedy Buzan, Mary Kaune, James Orlowski, Rfl:msey Riddell and Wendy Wainwright. Two Tritons, Jim Doi of San Clemente and Hope Jansen of Dana Point, woo letters of commendation. Approximately 20 percent of the finalists will ~Ive scbolarsbfps of flOO "' !5000. More than 370 swimmers partidpated ln the event. e Sb:th GNllUr• Vnlte LAKE FOREST -A new club, for sirtb uaders only, bas been formed .in Lake Forea"--------..,.--r--one of the first events will lie a spluh plrty Saturday at the Beach Ind Tennis Club. The event will take pboce between !:IO IDd l :IO p.m. Each membeT la welcome to bring one cuest. Memberoblp In the dub II open lo J,ake .Fmst resident.I only. For further lnfonnatkJD cODtact the club, &»4181. e Ueeme Retlamp Set SAN JUAN CAPISTBANO -Bu.Ineu licenses may 100D be reorganized here so that the revenue frcm ttlil aource can be updated. • Cily Admlniltr•tor,<;ler~ -E r n e • t Thom-to!~ tl10 City Cowld1 Monday that the ordinance governing the llceaaea will be updated and llmplified. Businesses will be clasaed Into flve clauificatlons, rather than the curren& 31 and the revenue rate will be deterJ:nln. eel by the type of bustdess. GARDEN SHOP IS GOING ••• . ' . ·• ;• l, '\ ~ ~ > • I WILD! Wl·L9:!'WILD! f. ' SAVE NOW ON OUR GARDEN SPECIALS *BEDDING PLANTS . __ AU 44' Par YAllnlD Pack . . *DECORATIVE BARK 3 ::t."· 144 *REDWOOD COMPOST .... ,,.1 1 1 ' . *ORTHO LIQUID FERTILIZER MIX •ALLONS OR MATCH *IMPORTED MEXICAN P.OTTERY ~ASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY NEWPORT BEACH • 2i499 25":.. I I • • • 4 MIL Y PU.OT Nixon Tas·k to Caim ··_War· Es.calation Fear.s: ' J _,, r . , ( " # • "" ... -·· -· ..... o1ready 'Ille Wbl1a -.. _, """' tbt lwtoc bonl on WI lbeme and 11-·lllddtn allied mlllllrJ --w11 not toa>Dllol to mlnbnbe the rim Involved a -to CUnbodlo'• plto.lor ~ • In tlit Oponuoa. 'Ibey IO\lllll to ., .. ' acale Americu aid qilmt lbe c.m, tbt lmprailoo the SOual V-munllt troops. llowevw, olllclall thn&lt with u.s. "combat aupp«t" wu acknowledged ID1 ~e11e1 ~ved a ,qJe 111rike --and did·· nol agallllt the North Vletnl!n9e and Vlei ,.,.._ the -8ll cl a -pbw COiii I_, would have tbt en.ct cl In lbe war wtih wider polltlcll and -.unc the 111n1t they pooed to the ml1111ry ~ : • Clmbodlan ·--ol Pmnler Loe ,_off!Hal•.acknowleclpd,~. ol, ---prlDce Norodom lbe allied drlve mlPI wW be followOd Slhaoouk u clllel cl stole. by ...,. IUdt 1llnllll In an effort to lt was not dear whether tile Preoldont c1o1troy 1111 '1111lllry c«plblllly cl North . In bb I p.m. EST teleWllon Hplonlllon V1"'no-·aud Vlei C.., -In would dbdooe jult -be bat decided Eut Cambodia. ' lo do -Lal lkll'• url'lJI requesl . . . . n---Id 1ut we<t Admlnistrall<ln olllcials ac~ 1" Pr.aden& wu expected to arpe they were not at all certa.m or the the IUddea move acr<111 tile Cambodian signllicance ol Ibo formatlon cl a united berdor -not rllt widening tbt war IDJ dola)'lnr l!libdrawll o1 U.S. fi>r<ff lndocbl-lront pcoclalmed at a,_. but. oo tbe contruy, wu necessary ing earlier this week of North to mate certain lbe wllbdrawlll could Vlelnamese, COmmunist Palbet Lio and continue unmoleoted. Viet Gong ~vet with Sll>anoul<. Tho Amortca.suppot1ed South Viet-'l1lls .. _ summit" btlleved to -drlYO came .. a -to moot have been held In Nunlng, SOuth Qllna, eo..r......,, who bad ••....t llWn.. 11'1Ll•Pork<Lto..lla<e been l>0l'l0lllU7_ would wan! to ovoid any U.S. tntuwollOli COiigfitiilittd tiy COiiiliiunbt ail.- in Cembodla -even in tbe combaWup-Premler C1loo En i.t. lt a1lo wu the -role -ltot Hanoi be ipurred rodpifA!t " • rlowlna -ol •P-io lnlenolfied efforts I hr o u g ho u t provll from SOvld Premier Alwl N. Jndocbln1. Kosygin. No Comment By Kopec~nes On 'f estimony N. Viets Rap U.S. Cambodia Move 1 ...... ., ......... ...., • Mn. Mo Holloftll of Cbatbarn, Enl!ind, ha• put a sign on her I.> , month-old baby's highchair oayt:g, · ''Do Not Feed Me Goldfi.ab." ·The 1 lllilf ._,. up after the family'• goli!flsh, Perky, dlnppeared from its bowl near the i.Dfant's chair. "He bad a l!Ullty loot," said Mn. Hallewell, ''like be bad swallowed 8 filb." • BERKELEY l!Elll!ITS, N.J. (AP) - The porenll cl. Mary Jo Koptdlne AJ they wW clel..-comm<lll on an lnquat report-..lwed In Bolton unW they read it wUb a lawyer. 'Ille Ko~ said Weclne3cloy lllgbt they 1'ould go to Wl11tt1 Barre, PL to conauU: with .attorney Jo 1 e p b F,llDqan, who bat rtpmellted them 1n the cale. Miu Kopechne Wll born in Wilkes Barre and was buried there last llDDIMI'. • Fluapn, who was successful in preventiJtg nhumation ol Mary Jo'1 body for an autopsy late last year, said, 1'I have ordered a copy ol the inquest report and 1r.-1p1 and wiD have "9 comment at least until after-I have read It tboroughly.1o '-~F~an _abo Is_ re~llnj· 1he pareQta la a civU action agaiut Sen. :Edward M. KennedY. and his insurance fltfll in connection with the auto de.a.th. The amount cl damqea aougbt bat DOI been diatloaed. ' Flailqu declined comme1t on what. effect the Inquest to111mony mlBbl bava. cm uie lawlUiL Mn. Kopechne lll1d on April 10 "II, w11 an aoddent. there's no doubt about it" whe21 commenting on a grand jury sessh>a which failed to find uy cause for criminal action against Kennedy .. She said at that time that both lhe and ber lwband looked forward to ... ing the tranacr!pt. Mrs.-Kopechne said Kennedy had calJ.. ed her that week to inquire 1'how we Greg JoMr 10 hU Jiltt1' Connit 1 were doing." She sald Keanedy "had and neigh~r Tracy Ptttrson, 10,' ati the habit" of callb1g her durin' the of Tejon, Calif., north of Gorman, · J>&St. teveral mootha to make aimllar take fuU advantage of ·the un.seaaomzl inquJries, . PARIS (UPI) -North Vldnam ... cmed file United stata today ol IRIP' plying material to Cambodia'• new regime to help maasam V- ud 0i1nese m1c1ents -Ibo nntmenUco o! au.... deelha In Cambodia. Nguyen Mob \ry, North Vletnamete repretentative to the Vietnam peace talb aceused the United Statol ol mend- ing the war to all of Indochina by providing support for South Vl•- troopo -·tins. lllllde Cambodia and ldded: "1111• Is not to -tile !act thot aince It lllqed tile ""P In Phnom l'<llh, ' Storm Ravages Oklahoma Area; 41 Persons Hurt OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -Tornadic winds, bail, torrential rain and one roving ~battored..bomes,-ochools, shops and churd>es early today, turning 1tl'ffb into rivers and scattering cars, roots and litter. At least 41 pel'80ns were injured by the storm that struck the city for five hours before daybreak. Abnost four i.o- cbes of rain flooded streets. 'lbe storm tore roofs off houses, knock· ~ down power lines and left much ol Okhohoma's larsest city without lights. gas or telephone service. More than JOO blocks were damased along the fashlonable Quill Creek and Camelot residential sections. One twister skirted town. spreading damage and destruction. A small cam. ping trailer was thrown into one man's living room. Burglar alarms walled all acro111 town. Dozens of streets were blocked by fallen trees and debris. Among the Injured was the Rev. David Monallan, principal at Bltllop McGulnnes High School, which was damaged by the acreeching wirld1. He was treated for cuts and bruises at a hospital. spring ,-now that feU in their' front van:t and alt over the Gorman af'tca T'itcentl11. The freak weather eloaed major arterial highway1 frrr 1tverul hours. Nympho Co,lle~ts • Dougie• Dodds-Parker, a mem-- ber of British Parliament, has ask- ed the Defense Ministry if marks- men from the Guards Regiment in London can be authorized to aid the City of Westminster's antlpig· eon campaign. • A Volk.noogtn b111 k pcn:Jccd in tht: living room of a 23rd floor dormitortl suite on the Ohio State University campus. School olf£- cial.I, contnding the CflQiMEal vehicle ii a firt: hamrd~ 1laDf Or- dered It removed. Tll< stvdmll bo"llhl lht 1961 ftlOdel bUI fro7" a juflkyaN! for $15, dbaHtlllbltd It ""4 """"'d It piece:bttpitec up. dormitorJI 1Uvator1 during the wt: how;ri ont morning la.st wek. Cable Car Girl Gets $50,000 . ' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A buxom ex..sunday school teacher has been awarded $50,000 damages from a cable car accident her attorney .said led her into the arms of 100 men . The etght. women and four male jurors dellbentad . for eight boura before · ~ 'tfednesday on the amount for Gkrll Syh, 29, in her suU against the i:lty Incl Ip transit system. ~ ~ ot> the Jurors held out for a I ._ i;llil ·Ibo fin&! vole was f..I. I , Slltfbatl ll!IO,IOll, hut ·•tloroey / • Mmlio ~ balled tile verdict aa F •· .. "Jilii:al ~~" which ..tallllohil 'lJie prlncipll ~ "fl<l'ch!C damages." · But bt said .l4lls Sykes would nttd 'l!SO,OIO worth cl psychiatric tnatment in the next five years and lndJcated he might appeal the amoont of the award. Miss Sykes was on a Hyde Street Cable car in 1964 when it broke loose, plunged down a hill and smashed into .. a power pole . During her 2~ days on lhe stand, she told of a craving after the aceldent, for cuddling and "emotional vibrations" -most easily obtainable through se1. "I wanted them to impart to me .some' of their strength," she testlfied of her 100 recent lovers. "By being close to someone, you receive emotional sustenanct." , She also testified lhe had a sheltered upbringing, taught Swday achoo! and sang in her home town choir In Dearborn Heights, Mich. She aaid her college friends used to kld her a bout being "the world's only 21·year-old virgin." Thun·derstorms Spread Vi.olent Weather Boih Up in Summertime Heat c:.i11 ...... IOUTHl.•N CALll'"O•NtA -Sullll'f ..... 101ttll'I """"" 'nll.lndfy ... ,,~ .. y. l.clcll 9VllY •l'lllf c:ool riortPI to norflMl1t winds, l.DS ANGILIS J.RIA -SllrlllY •l'lllf ol!ttill• --Tllurtde'!> •1111 l'ride•. l.otolll' WlnitY t.low Ofl'/'OM, Lowa llllttl 11l111h _, Ml, Hl'll! Ttwrtdrl 1t. """' .. .......,. "' -,... POIHT CONClllTION TO MEXICAN llOROI,.._._..,. !llM Yll'llMI Wllldl """' .... ........ ,_. Moomllll -iem " ... kMh ... •'*-T~ 111111 l'rlAn'. 0--IH'Y l•t~ -ll'IOr 11111 -Hkfrt llw clludt, -ClllNltl -ttn, ... llttt. •• ,_,. -· IXT•eMI IOU"Tltl.lllfil NEVAOA - ,..., .,,..,..,. ,........, wllfl "'"" ,.._.. otw.. Hlllfll ~' """"° .. °"" 1'I. ~ ,..,,...., llWll .. .,. MfJI ......... 1't. l.ctl _,,, flOl'1tltrty ~tal l'eaperet_.. .. ,..,..,.,.."" ": ~ ,lll'IC. .. ~.. JO l 7 All•nt1 t.l ,1 8tlttrt'1•1• ,, ,, 8!1m11rell ff :a So!M st Q T Bottwo ti .. e-i1" " n Chlffto IS to 1.•J Clncln11111t .. M .1' -» » Des Moi-II st .IJ Dotrolt ,.. n f1!1'11e'*• • ii l'orl Wwlll 1' '" ,.,.,,. n •• Htl-., Joi ~lu .. ,. ICIMol '"' ., " ..M u.v,... .. • LOI,....... ... 5' Mleml 11 16 M'""'9 .... 1t .. 4' ,., NtwClfi.-.. 74 v.s. s ..... _..,, -· c:o.uTAL AND INTEltMEDIATE VAL.LIV~ Md tlltilt!t~ __, TfWnllrf ll'llll ll'liN¥ wtlll lot•• WllY '"" cml ........ .,...... -i-. ""' llllttfl -'11' 511 "'"' A •IMI ..... HW.. 1~ Ill "'-H1tN ll'tfo NY .,..... 1IOt Ml io. ... ""'"" todW. V•rleW. ,,,,,_, lllt/'r! •1111 ~ '*"• NcM!l"' ""'lfrl. "'""I' lJ !) U tnoh hi .n.r-. · todW ONI ff~J', HIM 1' flo 7S. CIMftl '-""'-,....,. ll'tl'l'I • .......... lhvnclto!DnM r.ud IM ll'lllt- C'Onllnt!lt l'llll'I TtXlf .. Mlcttlft11 to- ... ,. U"'-IS#ll"f --tomflloft. """" ••111 ..... 11111. Trlfr9 -"' Jll'Wl'lldl•lt _,, of trlllrrll$ .... ,.. """""' wflkft ~ lni. MtlioM ol Tu1.. Olllelloltwi, Mlt_.,I, I_, MlflnMoll ollll lllfftol1. N~ Yort: " JI Nor"ltl l"l•llO N 0 o.klend 1M 90 0i111'1ome c11Y 1• " a.n Omllll " .. P•lfll '"""'" 1' M P•ao Rlllln n JS MOUKTJ.IH J.llllM-fl1lr 11111 tllf!lt-ft' .. .,,,. -~ l"rW.f. lM.ef _,, -"' to """"'*"' ..... ov.,. lllfM ._. nllllllf JI to JI, Mltfll ~ '7 to SI. HllM ,r....,. In ... IHT"lt.IOlll AHO OllEltT ltl"OtOMI -,..,,, .,,, a!llttl'IJ' • .,,.. ~ .. ,..... Hol'lfllm 1¥11\dt '""" 11 "' 21 ,,,..., OwwnlfM ... ,,..,.. Ill .. hJIMr Y'llllt'ft, H""' Tilvnd.t1' '5 " 11 ,...,.... 'ltllt¥t. 11 "' u ~ ... ~ '1 ..,._ HllN ,,_., Ill 119 ....,. f'1'!' ' .......... """' ........ l ' to1'.1 ........ ~,......,,.... • • 7', W1tw ..._,.°""' #, s-.11-. ~ TMllUCriitY ,..... hllel . . ·-.... ii:•~. '·· 'lllMT == ttltll .............. •i• l .f!I. 4.1 .... .............. 1:•0..111. ... l...w l'lllill ............. l:t, •,111, O.t StcMcl low •• • • ,,. '""'· J.l 11111 •M •~OJ'·"'• Ith 7~'5 •"'-MM .... •:11 1.1111. hh t :#1,f!I. Tllulldlnlwml, wftlctt Mlllll '' 111 IUIM*llkt 11111 Ill ,,. 111rwi .. mJll. IOdllll Wllf!IMN¥, tOllllllu94i "'""*- # !tie """' ..... """ flle ••rt'¥ ...,,., ,,,_, cmlml'lllllft"9 -undW ~ ... """' -""' •lorlt. Llf'tl lltll ~ .. ,.., ol T• .. W llldltN. air.1Jllr htil f'llW lrffl llf Ollie~, MIHOlll'I, l<111U .. Alb"' Mt• l)llflOll 11111 Mk~lNn. \.NHrlY t lftc/111 ol 11111 -r.d '"'° ~""-(lb' ..,. ~"' -------------- ""9nlx 71 d ,llbllllrtfl " .., l"orll•nd • ... .11 ""'111 c1rr 1s p Rid •luff 75 p R-II G Stcn!Ml'lfo 71 • kit Ulle Cltt 6l iJ ,II S1110llt0 .. G SM .... ~ .... 411 SMl!tt 11 41 ,,1 , .... ,.. JI .)4 TM""tl n M W1111~'" n " -the NII<lo .Admlnlltratlon bu atea1th1ly orsanlzed tb< supply ol munitions and other mU11arJ< malerlel to the Lon NoJ. Slrtk Matalt cUque lo maasacre tile Cam- bodian -1• and Vl<tnam.,. and Oilne!e rest~ In Cl!nhodla and Ibo not to mention tile l1moot dally violatloo cl file tmil«y of Clmbod!a by U.S. and Salgoo troopo. ly tbe targtt " the coup that led to the overthrow of Prince Norodom Si\anouk u Cambodian dde:f of 1 t a t e lllan:h 18. The Cll!lbod!an II~ and In· temaUona.l rtpereu.,idol cwenbedo11'ed the war in Vietnam ttaelf and apparently pushed tile I-Id Parb peace talks to a new low. ''This ii a new, ertreme.ly serious eocalatloo cl tile Nllon Admlnlstratloo Hanoi and the Vt.I COiii warned In ahat1>iY worded llotemem that the United Slates henceforth will be COO· ll'Olt<d by a United front ol ldtlst Vietnamete, Laotian and Cambodian IOl'COll. uwe severely c:cmdt1hn' and denounce the new and' extremely grave lllep ot the United Slatos In Camboclla," Hanoi's delegate, Nguyen MIOO· Vy .. Mid. "The United Statos bat carrltd Ibo war in Indochina ooe step f<n'ard by giving olden and openly suJ>llO'f.lnl the SOuth Vietname..o mllltary --on CambodW> aoU," the ·ff-. diplotnll said. in Clmbodia. '' . Vy'a statement WU the first time the Vleblamete Commun6lll had men- llooed <l1lneee resldentl .. being aU<1ed- The attact on Presidert Nixon's cledJlon to provide llipporl '9 Saigon's unlta that croaed tile Cambodian lrootler came at today's '5dl weekly ae9oD ol the V-peace ooolerence. SHOP SEARS SUNDAYS 12 Noon to 5 P.M. :' ::,'~":"::.~ :,::.;. a, e. --- Sears Sean Aluminum Frame Sturdy Screen Door i Low Priced! 88 ., F'.berglas• ..,..Dine ••• kick pillo fer ad.W protection • Low. low price yet run, famadomlt • Fiberd•• ecrnning for maim .. ventilation • Complete With lprins eloeer, h...u. and hook and eye.latch • Siue 32x80-incbtie and 36x80-inehe9 Better Mill·finiah Scften Doon i• mu 32s80-in. ~ 36s80-ia..9.99 b. R•plar 116.99. Screen Door SAVE $2! 1488 1 e Grey Fiberila .. llCl'llOD with l ..,i. bar,aircloter e Tulip lateh with loc!Ong ....... •IO.inch kickplate • Sizes 32xSO.inches and·~ 123.99 Anodized Extruded AJa.mina.m Screen Doon 32x80·incbes, 36:s80..ineheL..20.ll •· $32.99 Whife Extmded Aluminum Screen Door SA\E .. ,· ... •Charcoal Fibcrglaa~ &<:reiln.inc witb 2 white paeh ban e Black push button latch with locking button. IO" ki ckplatc • Size1 32x80-inch and 36x80.fnel. • White. baked enamel flailb Sears 3-in -1 Deluxe Asphalt Shing les • Thae 11hingles a.re rated • %35-U.. P"" .190 "I· II. ••• end that ..- they're tough , •They aNJ covered wil.b 100% pa.re n- pbalt that inake1 them thickt1r and 11tronger. Guaranteed for 18 years. Phone Se•n for free estimate 18-Ye:ar ln•talle:d Ddu.:s'e Alphalt Shin1le Root Guarantee When i111mllation i1 uranged throu&b Sean, if roof kak lhouid devt.\:OP beaute oJ Uf ddea iJ1 thi• gla or wor.U.....hip within 7 ft'.-S ol appliation. we will ttpair or uplxc, • our (lptioa. free. P., rqular current prier for 1udt ttPa.iror ttp~meiK during ncn 11 ye:an, Jllbtr.:til\J 1J2l6lh ol price (Of atblllODdt~llirt100 ~ SA VE 20%1 70 Sq. FL Roll Fiberglas Inaulation Rera1•1' $5.29 • Roll • Help1 lower you heating.cooling bill• • 3-incb thick upbtited paper acu a1 a Ylpor harrier ln JOU?' wall• • Solid la compreeeed. euy to handle .. u. $5.99 .. Foil·Faced" Insu1ation-4..66 .,.,, 15% OFF Sears _,,..,.~n•-•-•'""'"' --••••n --. .... ,.. ~---1 -···-·-· --·---II -M l--.. ~Hu,• ~IN! --.... ,,.., -111.11.. -" -II r-.U" ,......,_.llO..,...tn. --11 _ .. ,, .. ., ..,.._..., .. ,_.,,,,1n411--~11--1t ,._.,. ..... ,,_._ ............................ !aOA& .. ftHIJl.. ....... IJ.i-.. 11A."11Ml.-... _.,_..._,._.., ...... a .. Mil i f,-• ~· •' Ii ,. d • d ~ h d I. » '· ~ • .. I. l· <I iy "' .. .., .. "' II I ! • -• • • I I J Blackmun Voting Date Postponed WASHINGTON (UPI) - -wbo uld lhal "in view 'I1>e Senale Judklary Com-of delsyo that occurred oo the 1 mJttee decided today to delay last two nomJnaUont, no nomlnaUon abould be voted unW Tuetday a vote oa the on within 14 hours after hear- Supreme Court oominatton of . 1np _ !hi> committee voled Harry A. BlaCtmWI. But there unanhooully lo poetpone ... WU 1111 llgn of oppoeltloo-lo~-~-4PPl0~oi-unlfl the 11-yUMld federal appeals Tllesdaf." iuc!&e. Sen. Birch Bayh (D -Ind.) Bla-un n!Celved almost who Jed oppoolllon that led unaolmoua praise during a lo njedlon of the P"'viou& three-hour, 1 0-m I n u t e ap-nominees for the court vacan- purance before tbe com-cy _ Oemtrtt F. Haynsworth mlttee WadneadaJ and tbm and G. Harrold Canwell - were no report! of ttSUVa-told repiCW'ten "I w a s tioos today among the 17 prepared to v~ today," but members. said he still wanted aome But on a motlon ol Sen. time, before the nomlnatlan Robert C. Byrd (0-W. Va.) comes up on the Senate noor, to. "examlne the judge'• tax returns and flaanclal ••••••••••••• I • I • = • • • • • • • • • I • % ! • I records." He said he n:pecls to vote for Blackmua but added, "I want to write separate views . We just can't Ignore the technical coollicts of intere1t, even though they are not 1ubstantial." Blast Halts ThundJY, •orn '°· 1970 DAILY l'IU7 § 0 I Goodhye .::Ol•mhus? Studen~, Giia~dsf!len ~attle at-Ohio State V Groups Seek Tight Rein On Spending COLUM1'US, otilo (UPI ~ ....,.i c..,istora, ol tear, ps NaUoaal Guardlmen 1 n d .lntll the crowd: police and militant atudtnts Some student.I, ch an ti n g batUad today with tear gas, "slop Ille pip" and "Pli• oil rifle butts, bricks and bottles campus," tosttd bec'k the can~ in the a:eoond day of violence liters and threw homemade on the Ohio Stale Un!Yerotty gu bombl. campus. Mllll' otudenta "'"' el•bbed 111e !ates! dashes brw out lo Ille · .....,nd wltb rifle butta ~-al>out-1,!00 o'udeat1 • fJI Iha GuanLw_.J>i relused lo dllpene lllter armored penonnel canlen, gatberfnl lo prottll law en-moved th"""" the campua lor<ement lactlc1 du r I~ g .,.., dlaperaing groupo . ol Wednesday nlaht's violence l.n students. which sevea persona we.re ahot The 1tudlnta m..Uated ~Y and wounded. hurling bricks and botU'3 af The National Guardtme:n the guardsmen and police. and police, wearing au muks Police said 12 atudents were and ClU'T)'ill& riflea wtJb flsed amsttd today, bayonets and clubs, threw 1be rally in the oval was * ·* * * * * Guard Busy in Ohio WASHINGTON (UPI) - CiUzeu Groups I eek 1 D g tighter controls on defense spending arranged for spolo.rs in the Howe galleries today to strip away anonyinJty from By United Pre11 Iateru...i In alertlng the Ga a r d Congrtlslonal v ote 1 oo Nearly 4,000 Nat ton a I earlier, Rhodes aald, "If the military money bills. ... Guardsmen asslated ltlte and open, wltfare that h a a 'l1le spotters, representing local authorities today in c:on-characterized this strike ls nOt more than to _,.ups In the brought to an immediate end ~v ta.1"1"' .. "open warfare" OD '"'-G -~ ls ad fields of education1 health, ..... l6 ul'C Uuu re Y to move conservation and w e 1 r a r e , • Ohio highways hi a wlldcat ln for the protecllon and aafe- were determined to find out Teamstm ltrlke. ty of all ooncemed.11 how House members voted on Ohio Gov. Jamu A. Rbocfn Police escorted a caravan amendments to trlm a $20.2 ordered 3,000 Guardhntn on from the Armco Steel CO. in billion defense authorization active duty in northtutern MJddletown, Oldo, to nortbi'n bill today facing a final vote. Ohio and 700 men on duty Kentucky today without ln- Cllled by the student ISSetnbfy to protest activities o f autboriUes d u r i a g Wed- neadaiy's dlsturbancea bt which tbe aevea were abot, mote than IOO •moled and n Jn. jurod. . 1be demonstrations were started by atudenl> lo p"1ttst rej~lon of a llJI of demands presented to offlcl1ls !Ml -k. 111* lnjurod Wedneadoy In- cluded IS policemen, b<ll oolT one ftCJUlrad boepltalluUon, IANKRUPT-AUCllON .-, w-.r el U.S. C*frtct Cewt, "' .. ............. ,........, .... -·· J HOISi Oii HAIMONY MUSIC · ITOIB I YAN OIDlll'S NOMI fUltfllHIN• ITOll 1103 SO. MAIN ST., SANTA ANA Sunday, May 3rd • AT 11: .. A.M. 30 FISHER STEREO CONSOLES COWi PON EN TS·· PIANOS·· TAPES HOME FURNISHINGS·· STORE FIXTURES REGISTERS & OFRCE E9UIPMENT JO,..._ SNNe C ....... le Mrfon ..... & WIMt ltylel w/AM•PM ....... ,.'i:I!"' .. '..,. ..... etc. -11 .... c • ., ...... •/rwl• ........ -· ...... -..... -·-,. ,.,. lee--. -I,..... lpMot Pi... -...... 11 11M. °'99 -........ .._ m• AM.JM,._, C ...... w/~ .,..._ 1llelr -1• LP ....... y.,_ I C•slJw..M ...... s.,,tltlll • 5""' Mwlc -JI U,W. W.. CW.. I..,_ -...... lllft.; ...,._, ....... ,...__ ....... IHw & ~ 1'"9 ~-J N.n •11 c.11 l11k1111-0ftlce .... , ...................... .... fw fvrther lnfWIMtleR CMtact: • • • • • Queen's Trip The "ad hoc committee on in the soutbtm ••ct Ion 1 cldent but there were reportt the 1971 defense budget" is Wednesday after new out-tJ gunfire at truck! and Ur& operating on the premise that breaks of violence and van-aluhinc and rock throwing additional federal funds for dalism in tbe l&-day-okt ltrlke. WedneJday . INIPICTION: SAT., MAY W , 1M -Dl9Mlt ,....,., "-.. ....,, .... iii ~ .,. CwtHIW ClltlCt. l1MM1 .,.. ,._..,, OSTllN I. OSTllN CO. <ZlJJ 749.7291 7SI I. 12th It., LAii Antol• "'21 - ~ , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • = ORANGE, Australia (UPI) a -Three dynamite caps ex- • ploded today beneatb a train dom~tic needs will not, ______ _:. ____ _..:. _ __:_..:. ____ _ PAID MONTHLY I carrying Queen Elizabetb 11 and the..,.l>Jte of Edinburgh on = their royal tour of Australia, I stopping the train and bring. • Ing a brief bomb scare. 1be explosklns came as the • train was moving through the NO LONG·TERM • Bl khe" I Bl REOUJREAIENTS • ac ai.u area 0 the ue become available until the e:r- pet'ted flS billion for military programs this year is ap. preclably trimmed . House rules make 1t n:· tremely difficult to achieve roll call votes before final action. Vir.tu ally all a Mountains between Sydney \'OUR! oCH-a-!Vl!fllV • -and-Orange, 1i:s-dest1nattOl'I . MOHTII, I pe.os CMlS:!( • Some occupants f th tra . amendmenta.-are deeided-b1Yl----- non-record votes. i • • • = • I on ••ch •sooo Cer1u1. 0 e m, c1ta. u lleld undir s • laeluding senior railway of. monlh1, prlnelp•I r•-• fitials, were shaken but a duc•d by eh•ek• ••nl • spokesman for Uie royal }OU. Fund• In l•I• •• 251h ••m lrom 1•L With· • household would not say clr•Wlll•hne•lwrtSbeen • whether the Queen and duke pal~ on d•mtind. • had been disturbed. f:t!li'll! PA I D C91"AmRLY • I I Germans United ... PA•••ooK• • •ny emounl. Fund• In A • l M • l•I• •I 11 lh 1ny monlh • gams 8Xl eam l11lere11 from 111. • c.. ................ _,. ill Dftr 58 C1llftr1l1 OlfkJI ...._.of I Cloporril JM!""""' • MOPll THAN A llWON • Opponent! of heavy military spending were uruuccessful in getting a temporary change In rules for consideraUon of the $20 billion w e a p o n s authorizaUoo -the first legislation in the annual serie1 of defense bills. So they turned to the spotter lechnlque, previously ~ by w e I l - dl1cipllned lobby groups such as those ln education to ketp track of how the lawmak.en vote during the non-record tallies. • OOLLA"• ht AlllTI • BERLIN (UPJ) -Germans in both., East and West are against the maxi. Polls taken by a newspaper in West Berlin and a newspape r in the E a s t German city of Halle showed a majority of their readers are against the new long dress length. Congressional crlties work- ing with the ad hoc committee are seeking to trim up to $1.4 billion from the QJ.2 billion total on the grounds that alleged waste by the Pen- tagon and Its contractors more than equals that amount. • S):[V STJ11N, f......,._PHoldt!ot • li~iQ!iltt• COSIA -• 2200 -&YI. ~ QAVIS RROWN \C.." 1J 0 \\\ DQ;.to M.•'•' ,. ~~ HALO OF HEAT Fast dry clothes at low temps. PERMANENT PRESS CYCLE prav ldu wrinkle ·removing con- ditiomnr period attar clqthos aro drlod - means '"' ltonl!lf. 1 pnUo cltcle of low, Jl9 even heat means soft virtually wrink~. froo. I clothes In minimum time. Sms lronlnc. . REVOLVING LINT FIL- TER Is h~ly olDclent. Filters 00% of ex- hlust air. Sno~s In. Sntps out. c 1sn1 taiJy, e Full Openln~ S1fety Door • lar~ Capac:it(. Orum e Sn7 •• Port e aln Enem- e1o Orum e Convection Cooleci C.binet • ].Way Ventin9 e PltCU START AT ONLY '19991 DAVIS-BROWN 411 E. 17th St. C-M--646-1614 O.Uyfte~ &Prt.f tef ..... ......_ .... Can a car pried hundred• ot dollan lat than ot1* penOnal - )Ul\lt)' can sun bl & penonal-- luxury car'P We're happy to let tbt evidence apoat ror itldf. HIP~ heaclll&htl In the clatolc unit dtolp. Take a·quir:k look It Monte Catto. Oet lhe loeliq """ had· liaJ>u.,.miuiJll! They art. For a "ery simple ....... Our ttylioll ..-Monll ~ Carlo to come cJeaa up froat.1 • Bo they -to 001 • enainem. who came up with th• 1in&)e hiJb-iDllDlky unit )'OU eeebcn ... Bea.utitut1 C--lllted aphol""Y. Fint, our ..i maken 111pport the cuthiolll with the kind of "S" sprinp round in 8ne furniture. Nu:t, they contour them so you ·u 1it in. Dot OD. the _._And 111111. tbeyfttddl cushion with Jwi.urioua pat· tern doth, or CUiiom-knit cloth and .m,L Whm it'comes to luxury'1 Monte Carlo takes a back 1tatlto· no -Tho look' of Cupothlm barlod olm In the lnltnancnt panel Tett·-11 Monte Carlo's distinctive lnltnlo me:nt panel aomo- time. You'll find C¥mYthinl'• whn it abouJd be. M it lhould bt. Yoo'llalloftodlhehalld·rubbcd look of OQe, ot the rant wood paint around: CarpaltUan burled elm. EJpeml,..Jooking'I Sun.· . B'ut then what~ of Monte Carlo isn't? -• -· · Plaoh detp-lwlst c.upetlng. Olve Monte Carlo a chance, and il'll pamper you. Its carpeting. for example. la worthy o( dcc:onlin1 your llvins room. So we 1pread it from front to t.cL Door tp door. £wa Of lhl door a bit, like the "'penal"" penooaJ can do. It ' Standard ~hp 330 VB. Leave it to a c.ar like Monte Carlo to live you hlah porf'orm&nco without hi&b octane. That'• riaht. ill ~ don! 250- ho11epow 350-<ubio- ioch va rur11 on rquluau. But ir you have more en&int in mind, order one or thete; A JOO.hp 3'°' A 265·hp .00, Or our 360-bp 4'4 SS peckap. Power clloc brakn Jndaded. Monte Carlo comm.equipped with power dilc tnkcrt up front. They're fade-rcaiatant. you know_s Which means you stop smoolh.1 • And sure. Astra Vmttlatton. Outside air enten th uah ven~poru inlbeinalnl tpaneL arculatea. Then Wta 1pecial reJief•Val't'a. So )'OU ride rtfi more qutotly can remain up. N lih-cbol l wnmtl' breeze in Monte Carlo. , ' fall Coll nopemlon. We pui •bis coil IJlrl•• al -wbeel. One that'• !:"c:t:'~ .. lpood lrilll tl>o bodyandoqul-Mlsbtofy0iu Monta Carlo. Which means you don't ride too soft. Or IOO bard. Wheel ..... an llaMard. And 10 ue a lot ol Monta CU10'1 other fc:atura Uke a precitjon cut srWe. Concealed Wi$)ef bladca. AJJ electric dock. Sroall featurea, maybe. But featura that establilh beyond uY doubt that Monte Carlo is a pe:nonal twnuy car. The only feature that docln'tf Sltl3•. Pllltles yoo 8nt, "-• Int. -··-·=-. .. ------ /', ' \ I l ... ___ _ -. ' DA.RY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE " • Ch ao s Ill E.dricatio.n .. ' - The days of the d0clle schoolteacher .are jone. !I~ . Jn Orange County, as in the ·rest oft.be nation,'rteacb'tn ' are showing a hard line-on salaries· and benflfllt, 8nd they're using muscle to get what they want .• We hope they give •pause before lollowlric Los M- geles teachers in st.riling for what they wanL , .;,.. ___ .;,· ~T-he-lesson-is clOi&-ttJ..homa.-lUi-eaS)Lto...See,-euy to under6tand. . Los A'Tlgeles children have been dealt an l.l~able:. blow by the strike. Some will have trouble ~( gr•d· uated. Others .bar• a,issed leamil>& tl\al will u!',Ver, be caught up. Loss 1n state aid because of the slrlke af- ready has cost the Los Angeles system many thousands of dollars it will never recove~ Teachers in Los Angeles may have made their point -that the schools are uoderfinanced and ihat they are underpaid. But in the process, they sacrificed thousands of hours of instruction in a strike that actuaJ- ly is ille~al. Moreover, they run the grave risk of IOllng all public support, no matter how valid ia: thetr argu- ment. The Los AngelN·~icbool sy;stem ,~nnot IOlve the ,.. problem, no matter W'haf1tbe prelsure: 'The core of the: 1 ~ crisis that !aces Los l)ngele$:ana every other school dlstrict in Cali:forni~·is the-fa~e o( the Legislature and the executive ,t>rphc~· for lnore than a decade tO face financial reali'ttes. • · · A few years ago, local school districts could depend on 50 percent of their income to come from state .sources. The statewide average now is 36 percent. . mope,:)o hold.lijl. CawOmla's·o~roud education pro- cram, _ · •And .the LeJll-1ature and the governor' thus far have advanced no \"°'~/•· Jllld . practical alterna~ves. In tlle sh0rt1 \u!l!I. teachers and other school )!er· sonnel ti>aY lq~.'a.:rew dollars fl'om 'dw1rlclllng l>Od-~ ·.bY A\rikh!&-~elr viclo!X:l\'ill not 'be a l°".-4 one • the)'-can.neyer.npa!fihlaamage ey ·wtiii. or. can lhot' $, !lack'tlili ·support they ltalJ<I. to lose. The1answer Uea lnbroad.Rlorrn, relonn'ttiat -nol COJllO too .sooo. , . , . ' Moa. certainly it does not lie in. teacher strikes. Rule of Law, Not Men Law Day will be observed .locally and ·across ·the • nation tomorrow, May 1: It is also the May Day of Coar munis'l observance. ', • · · So it's a good time -especiOuy ~g cl!lilPUs .. radlcals-.lo pause and think about thf"l!llrast between .'the ,free nljljON :and the totalitarian didi!Wii!_U1>1. A rule of~s.· not rule of men, is a V@. ;eornerstone !or. any 'nallOD °cherishing the ireedom )I~ dlb1ity of tli'e individual:,~• I ' (, ( ' ~ This .,_,;cept has now been challen1lil . by the Chi.' ca go Seven. the • SOS, Black Penthert 1aDd: 'others ·who ' would substitute the coer.clve rule of the 8nned mOb and the arsonist's torch.for the rule of law. Yet but for that very rule oHaw which the1 despi1e •iii! •eek to destroy, none of. tb~~ grou1t4 or movementl cl?uit4 Wat. , ,· : • . ' Dist~cts turn tp, the..~payers to vote for more bonds, more overrides fo make up the difference. Pr~ erty taxpayers -their ba~s against the wall -turn them down. And the crisis deepens. There is oo magic formula. The needed money must come from some source, and the sarne taxpayers stand Law Day tomorrow will be a J!ll04, time to .u,r thanks that America'ns still live under a·iule Of law not men, instead of the -opposite. And to resolve that ~yen the excease~ of the extre:mists •. left and right, will never provoj,e ;us 10to abandomng this fundamental protection o! our ngbts. 'I can't make U tonight, Marge, I gotta go lo a pcu cc rally.' at the base of the tax-financial structure. But the pres- ent _system is not work.ing; .. il is ,not providing enough ,. ~Jay 5 El~ction lmp~at to GOP . .. ~ .~.., . . ' The-Alabama eowe~~ ~Play \VASHINGTON -John Mitchell has now become the first attorney general· .... -- ln our history openly to advocate tha.ti. .. _ Americans disobey Jaws they do not "-! li ke. When the attorney general COl.J.n&eled .- Southerners recently to ctisregard court orders on the ground that there is a right "to reject unreasonable re- tiuiremenls of busing and to send their 1·hildren to neighborhood schools," he Hnally confirmed that this Administration It is also undoubtedly the r~son the !?resident was willing to risk some Senate seals in mo by his seeminel1. in· temperate -but in fact carefully calculated -attack after tpf: vote m Judge Harrold Carswell. stnalon like Albert Gore of Tenneaee, R a 1 p h Yarboroogh of Te11s and Quentin Burdick of North Dakota will be nmning more · stroogly u a result of the President's outburst, but · Wallace, so the Mitc~ll .strategy goes, will be weaker. "'ill gladly abandon law ·and order if It will help beat Ge'{tce ~a~ace. That is the rea.;. ~or Mitchell 's :istoundi~g . call to . the Republican leaders. When he a s s e r t e d that this revolutionary r I g ht to ignore court orders is "just as lmµortant as the right of all our citizens to be assigned without regard to race," Mitchell was 1clling the young radicals that he shares l heir contempt for a ~31stem of govern· 111ent under law -but he was really 1naking a campaign speech for Alabama Democrats 'Ntlo will choose on May S between Gov. Albert Brewer and \Vallacc. IF WALLA CE DOES NOT beat Bttwer on May S for the DemocraUc nomination for governor (B:rewer s u c c e e d e d Wallace'• wile, Lurleen, in the office), he is clearly through as a national carr didate. Without Wallace as a factor in 1972, the South and mucb of the Border States region are then considered -by the \Vhite House men -as sate for Mr. Nixon. For that matter, they look to gamer a harvest of votes lnnong incipient Wallace voters In the North as well. So ail •tbe GOP power there -financial Alabama ~bllcan, haa been raising money for Brewer for mc:inths. And the statemmU by the Pr<ltdent •nd the - 1ttorney general -infl~torY as they m•y be in the rest o( lhO COW!lry -'are designed only for' coMlmptlon in Alabama. "Don't Worry," they are. aayinc. "You don't need Geof'ge to keep us honest." ALTHOUGH WAUAC:::E 1ees the threat <:I<arl)'· -..ii, it .is. ,..;.,.;,hlng th•t DeriloC:ralle lead<n &Wiio(hoot the coon- . tfr.. do not. 1be pnsldenUal elect ion of tm may be· over· and IOllC bY' May I , 1970, fou,tlt and won · in the single lllat. of 'Alabama. • A W allacl victqry would· p e r m i t Democrat& to keep their hopes !or car· rylng Tel:aa, Missouri, Arki1nsas and other atates.. It .woutd ,also insure more outrageous statements, .such as those ·of Mitchell, u the Adminilllration ~ · pnued its, ~ to take . votes away from a Oe'sh-and-b)o(lct'menace.. It would keep the Adm.lniMn:Uon headin1 IOUth, 'Ind therefore it would keep a liberal option alive. ~o LESS AN authority than Kevin Phillips, until recently Mitchell's aide and the leading "Southern strategist" in the GOP. believes that {he Alabama primary is the most important election -not of this year's campaign, but for 19n. There are. says Phillips. 182 ,,lectorcil votes for Hichard Nixon riding 1he resul!. and !hot is why top GOP spokesmen and strategists are working !>O hard le win the white South this mon th. Thus, In cold polillcol Iosk. there b one issue and one iB!nJe akmf' that ought to unit. Hubert Humphref, Ed M"'ill<. George McGovern, Edward Kennedy Ind the new Democratic coalition -and that is the need to rt-f:lect George Wallace in Alaban'Ja. To Q:ti cynicism has the Southern ltrategy bro u ch t American polit.ica in 1970. as wen as . ideological -is goin~ into the" t!fktt• to, Aefeat Wallace. Winton mount. tbt. p01tmaster general .and an ~ By Frank ~tanklewlci ud Tom Brade• . ,,. . A Crime . Ag·a,inst -N8:tu~e .·r ,~i~·t · ~. > Tznlc: an eve11ino In 1984. Scene: Ilic 111odtst living roo1n of Jolln and . \fllry. l L Ii their third wedding a1u·it., 11ersur11. Mllry is seated before 'th~ f 1rr, k11ittlng. John <glancing up from bi.I paper): \Yh~H's that you're knitUng, dear? !\tary 1 ncrvol1!)1) ~ ~ just -~a pair ur booties. • John: That's ni ••• {alarmed) A \1·ha1? !\tary: (blushing ): t didn't know how 1o tell you, dear. You see, I'm going to ha ve a , .. t blurting it ou!\ Well, J'm going lo have a baby. John lleaping to his feet); Good grief, f\1ary! llow <.'Ould you~ fl.1ary: Jl just happened. Liut, really, J ohn, we can afford a child. Jobu: J know that. Mary. 'But whot are we going to tell our friends! · P.1ary : \Vc'IJ just tell them the truth, lhat's all. John : \Vherc have you been for the --·--Thursday, April 30, 1970 The editorial paoe of the Daily J>tlot 1eekt to i?tftmn and stim- ulate reader• bu pre1enttng thia tt11Dspaptr'1 opinlonl and cont- nunta.r11 on topki of fnttre1& 0>ul rlgnfficanu, br proofding o forum for Iii• "'"'"'"'"" of our readerJ' opiniOM, ond bf p1e1entina the divt'1t trlt10t po-i'!U of infm"f'fl.ld obttnlfl'rt nd. 1tJOkc!tfN1t1t on aopb of the <14v. \, Robert N. Weed, PubHll>er • 1, past ten years? You know bow everyone feels about people having babies. Oh, rve been so proud of ua. When 10meone looked al me suspkklu&ly oil asked, "How many chtldrtn do you have!1t. l coukl hold my bead up and 11y, "NOiie!" But now ••• MUl': Other couple• slill have babies. Remember just 1ut year Cllt Gfmmlcbea down ln the nes:t block ••• JobD : And remfmber what everybody said about them. selfilh, careless, anU.. ecolo~cal environment delpQUera :._ that was about the tindell relftll'k. (wiat!UliY) You kRow. just 1aat: week Geor1e Peedy was passing around cigars at. the office and ~·e all clapped him on the back aml shook his hand ••• Mary : See? He was proud -his wi(e had a baby. Jobn: No, she had an abortion. 1 don'! suppose ••• MllJ': Ira too l•t.. But, John, I think ft'a silly. I don"t ae what harm one li!QI, litlie baby'o !Oin& .. do ••• J .... (lbocked): What harm! H•ftO't you heeo followin( the Deportment al EcololY'• w•rninp -aewspopm, billhoanls, radio, t.levlslon. Tbb child of yours will prod1JCt A.2 toM of garbage, :IU to"' of •~ pollutants, Ind I forget how many . tons of Industrial waste.a. He wUJ consuma 41.S tom ol irreplaceable ruourcea IUdl u eo1l ud oil, ·31.3 lonl of tow<rlnf redwoods, Juniper •nd pll<, 111.2 IGDI"' ••• Miry _(disbcllevinc): A Httlo baby, doing au that! JoU: lie will during his lifetime, Mary. This child, for which you a~e respQnslble~will uoarcuiil>Jy help destroy our environment. MUl': Oh, John, can't you thl>k of him IS our child? •. J.i. (brliht.ninll); I wu aoiq to ask you about that, Marj • ..Now, you didn't by IDY chanCe have an affair with the milkman, did )'OU! (hopefully) Or that oloe lootin&. tel<vb!M repair- man? or... •, ~ M~~l: 'C/1'J : J<>llo, you're ~: (~utn1J: I wu lust hopln1 I wam 't raponslble, that's all. MllJI How CID you -your own child? ~91' :J mlJBon , 1'&1'1. inen Jlave be<a ptODd al beoilmllq(f•thell. • Jm: 'l1ley didn't -wut they ...... doiJIJ. aut -111,tt the ecolocbta have ahowa UI what a ant!llDI Gime against. nature it la , • • . ~ .-• t Mory (lhriWlnl heraJI •t hls feel): Pl..,., d<mst, try lo ahare my hap- pineu. Just think, together we are c:eaUng God's ireatest 111t -a cuddly. p<nk, glowing, beautiful baby! .Miia (tumin& 1way In disdain): It rntY be a baby to you. But to us ecotogy-orlented (itiltns, Mary , It's just IU toas of farbqe. near Gloon1y Gus: ... Funn y, Feist y New -No vei I ByLagunan ~ Clark bu an IQ of 11ll. a ~'~"""' system for breaking the black· jack hap.ts aJ Las Vegas; and a case of near-es:hau.sUon from the slx>w girls' lrJnae be•fill, courtesy of tho house. Otbtf than that, he's just an ordinary guy fronl Brooklyn. He ia ·abo 1he hero o( "The Fortu11c Macblne," rompifli . through Laguna Beach author Sam Ross' first work o! humorous flclion. io tunny, feisty fashion. ' ·-EDDIE'S FALL l'rom innocence awd rile to riches begins as the result o( an oceupatiOnal hazard -or fringe benefit -call it what you will whe11 a computer date bureau programmer fls:e s lµm.self uP tree. His dream girl ls rich, beautiful, twice-divorced Mary Hackett and Daddy doesn't like Eddie. Mary doesn't like Daddy, whose choice of husbands for her has included 1 swishy fruit and a sadistic brute. So Miss Hackett Joans Eddie '5,000 while he de~es a foolproof mathematical ccmputer system of win- alng and i! sent west on a mission to make a bigger fortune than Daddy Hackett has ud show him up. · JUST LIKE ANY red-blooded boy from Brooklyn, Eddie loses his head -ac· tuaUy he bumps it on the rainbow after stumbling on the pol of gold -and the action picks up. That isn't all that gels picked up . Tbls rtvlewer wouldn't know a wild blackjack card from the Old J.1aid (the cardroom Jarcmt is extremely deep) but the p)I the management sends up aren't of ~ URerience. His system cllc:ka ju.st .as be hits Mary's bottom dollar, ~ ltt, Pd the parade of girls la lnlendecl to take his photographic miDd off h1I hlcrative work. TJl£Y AUO 1\IAKE him forget Mary t.mpororily. Moving along at a typical Las Vegas pace, "The Fortune Machine" winds up to 'an unexpected climax in which Eddie Is relieved of his whmings .first by a call girl, then a gangster and goes back for eve• more. Meanwhile, the guy with the foolproof system is systematically blackballed from one casino after the other, while Howard H\l&hes presumably buys aspirin by the car~ u be goes broke. RJD OF THE expensive lady ol tbe night -(1'you had the last or the best,'' explains a house henehman who cau1bt up wlth her) -and tbe gangster who robbed hlm later, Eddie is atlll tailed by 1 roySterJ man. Whether you know a11ything about blackjack is immaterial, because every reader thinks he'1 been robbed by lhe me.11ace who finally taps his shoulder. Gambling proceeds are just like any othe.r Income -tas:able, he explains to Eddie, who has been joined by Mary tn the glittering city of easy come, ea11 go. Rolla •uthol'<d "He Ran All The \Vay," •'Ready For The Tiger," and "Hang-Up," btlott trying hit experienced hand at a more lighthearted, "The Fortune A1achine" {Delacone Press: $5.95). --Allllllr .R. ¥Imel Telling a Virtue From a Vice Thoughts at Large: One easy way to distinguish a virtue from a vice is that a virtue enjoys seeing itself reflected in others -as generosity appreciates generosity -bu: a vice resents seeing itself refrecled in others -as egotism cannot sland rival egotism. • • • F'or every one man who is working hard in order to get ahead, lit are working hard in order to get along. • • • She used to be called "a woman with a past" -now she's called " a girl with a futur e.'' • • • Speaking of flower-names, as T was the other day, recalled Alphoncse Kerr 's comment on the subject: "Botany is not ·a science; it is the art of insulting flowers in Greek and Latin." • • • The most over-valued trait in the arts is "sincerity." considered as a good thing in itself; the worst singers I have ever heard were suffused wilh sincerity -so much so that they could scarcely hear their lack of talent • • • No husband has the right to designate himself as "experienced" as long as he still tells his wife the exact amount he won or lost in a poker game. • • • The finest rebuke to long-windedness w,as given by Henry Clay, when Alex- ander Smyth, a tedious speaker in Congress, said to him, "You1 sir, speak for the present generation: but l sµeak S y<luev J. Har1·is . . ) for posterity.'' ''Yes," replied Clay. "and you seem resolved to spea k until the arriva l of your aud1enc:c." • • • The most stin1u lating ploy l saw on Broadway all season was Kopil's "In· dians, .. wbich closed prematurely but prompted me lo read the new book, "The Geronimo Campaign ," by Odie Faulk. y,•hi{'h gives ;in rxcitlng but reliRble account of the white man·s perfidy al thal time. • • • • Politicians are always asto unded , ancl a lithe indignant, wh en confronted in of· fice with their campaign promises: for , as De Gaulle observed, since a politician never believes what he S.'.IVS. he is su.'llrised when others believe ·him. • • • Now that divorce is l:M!ing taken out of the adversary system, the next lega l refor1n will be in auto accident insurancr. \\'here the concept of .. guilt" 1.~ JU~t as often irrelevant as it is in matrimonial matters. < • • One of tl1e chief differences hehvef.rt the generations 1s that \l.'e used to do our homework in solitud e aod <1 uiet ; bul today. due to some kind of Pavlovian conditioning, homew:irk apparently can be done best only wi lh a transistor blar· ing, the TV on. and a telephone receiver clamped to one ear. The Nation's Real Need By J . EDGAR HOOVER Director Federal Bureau or lavestigatlon Citizenship, according to the dictionary. means the "duties, rights •. ~ privileges of being a citizen." I tlllnk it is signifi. cant to note that in the definition duties come first. Unfortunately, in pra ctice many of our citizens not only place duties last but some ignore them altogetller. Theodore Roosevelt once stated. "The first requisite of a good citizen in this republic of ours is that he shall be able and willing to pull his weight." A noted author .once wrote. "Neither democracy nor effective representation i$ pos_,ible until each participant in the group -and this is true equally of a household or a nation -devotes a measurable part of his life to furthering its existence." MUCH OF THE CR~1E and violence In our !Oeiety today occurs. I am surc. because not enough American! pull their weight and not enough Americans devote measurable parts of Uleir lives to further the es:lstence of their homes and their naUOn. They need to break away from the "what's in it for me" syndrome Jnd help protect and preserve the rn!edoms which they ta)<e for granted. ·Tile full duty or a man a3 a free citiien extends beyond his own self·in· terests. Where selfishneas prevails, benevolence-and good will die. Good citizenship ll much more than n classroom subject ; It is· a vltn l. dally chore ror all free people if they hope to remain free. It Is a deb! to the past lilnd an obllgatlon lo the fut ure. Good clti~enshlp. lil<e other wgrthy goals, Is the frutt or ~r!OOal commitment and Involvement. It 1.:1 1 soleJJllt coalract (;ue~l Edit orial l bet11'cen the indil 1dual nnd his govern· ment. IN TllE UNITED STATES, a citizen is a parl of his governm ent. a system founded on the rule of law, nol men. Its powers are derived fron1 the consent of the governed. It is established on the principles of freedom. equality, justice, and humanity. These represe nt the rights and prlvileges of citizenship. But rights and privileges are inseparable from duties. Some basic duties of a citizen are to love his country. re spect and obey its laws, participate in lls affairs and operations. and defend It against all enemies. In America, the rewards of citizen.ship art price1ess, but the demands are high. If we do not meel the demand s. lhtre will be no rewards, To my mind, a real need in our countr:y today is for all people to do thelr duty as citizens. By George --~ Deer r.cori;:e : !\fy old-fashioned father gol nlal1 the other night betau!'c r wa!'I sitting In the parlor holding a sailor's hand . Isn't this prclty square? ANNOYED Dear Annoyed : N6t necessarily. ?i-lnybe your r{lther ~·115 mpd beca u5c wh~·n you're ~lttlng In the parlor wHh a sailor he felt )'OU ~hould hold both his hands . ~ E" - .,, \ ) od he ... .,. •UI +k, lie •Ut ,., nd )f• "· '" is ~1 :al !C, 1st "' '" do :t; •• an "• er I n· en m n. ot )0 y, "' p. le a ct L< ii ip h. •• • " QUEENll! lly Phil lnterlandl I - "It's not that I'm not flatteffi!. It'• just that I think the Chairman of the B:oard and major stockholder should know better!°' • CHECKING •UP• Ha s Anyone Made Pet of Wolverine? By L. M. BOYD If VOV were to pick a national flower, which would it be? .ln a nationwide poll on the matter, the rose ranked No. I. the carnation .No. 2 and the chrysanthemum No. 3. Grass came in No. 18 . .• ~IEN WHO RETIRE at lhe age of 50 on the average are gone by the age of 63. But men who retire al the age of 65 on the average sur vive beyond the age ol 70. A statistical fact. SClENCE -Why can't the monkey talk? That's what the science boys at the University of Connecticut wanted to know . So they examined a monkey's mouth and throat ·with great care. The larynx is different. The ton g u e doesn't move. The vocal chords aren't in contro l. 'fhat's why, they discovered. lnteresting. I always tbought the monkey was just too stupid. KATE SMITH ha s in· troduced more than 630 songs. Think of that! How many songs has Bing w Crosby in- troduced'.' . . • THAT YOUNGSTER with a repulaw tion as the classroom bully almost inva riably develops a habit of tailgating after he learns to drive. Or so says a psychiatrist. . . MISTER, do you consider yourself a hunter? If so, did you spend $123.06 last year on outings? That's Ute national average. OPEN QUESTION -Has an ybody in the world ever made a household pet out of a wolverine? INFOR1\1ED SOURCES - contend Jackie Onas.sis spends approximately 60 percent of her "''aking hours shopping for articles of personal adorn- ment. Doesn't sound like much fun, frankly. Shopping is hard . on the nerves .•. YOUR P.ET gila monster will not get dangerous, providing you keep him cool. In the winler, in fact, he may even bealme cuddly . Put him in the bot sun, though, and he will turn vicious. Remem ber that. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "How long can ooe of those walking catfish in Florida stay out of the water?" A. Up to 24 hours if said fish can find enough wet dirt to keep its skin from drying out. . . Q. "What percentage of American wives engage in premarital sex?" A. I don't want to talk about it. Too bashful. • • Q. "Is it true Henry Ford did not believe in sending young men to col- lege?" A. Quite true. He thought college was for the birds. Refused to send his son Edsel, in fact . WVE AND WAR -Lord Byron, the great lover, is said to have beliefed with all his heart in the lliree-minute kiss. Sarah Bernhardt, the great ac tress. is known to -have favored the fi ve-second ki ss. Our Love and War Man has been asked to make a judg- ment on this matt.er, \Vhich is the more roqiantic -the long or tbe . short kiss? It depends upon how )'OU feel about the party with whom you. are engaged in this pleasant pastime, he con- cludes, a n d upon your den· tu res. Your que~uans and com- ments are welcomed ana will be used in CHECKING UP wherever pos.rible. Ad· dress letters to L. M. Bot1d. P.O. Box 1875. Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. Sc opes Has a Tlieory 011 J.fl hy of His Trial COLUJ\1BUS. Ohio (UPI) - .The "J\,lonkey 1'rial" of 1925 v.•as the result in part of merchants in Dayton, Te.in .• wanting to put the city on the map. according to John T. Scopes, the central figure in that controversia l case. Scopes was the y o u n g biology teacher who was tried under a law in Tennessee that prOhibited the teaching of the evolution lheory of man. Now 69. Scopes recalled those days while here recently to speak on the environment. He said he got involved in the trial after the American Civil Liberties Union could not persuade any other teacher to take part In it. ''Nooe of them were in any position to let Lhemselves be used in a test case," he said. "~t e. I was going back to school, had no obligations, I was free and avaUable." f{e sa id "nobody really paid much attenlion" to the anti· evolution law until Wllllam .Jennings Bry11n "started talk· 1;J1& about It. .. . "Bryan was 1 Crustraled man ," Scopes said, "He had failed in h.is political career a.id he thought he'd do one thing to show he had the public at heart. He was raised as a fundamentalist and he thought there was a lot to be said for the moral teachings ol the old time religion." Besides the ACLU, those In- volved In stirring up the hornet's neil, he maintains, was a group of lo ca I merchants '"who wanted to put Dayton on the map." The trial was the basis for the play and film, "Inherit the Wild." Other prominent figures in the case were attorney Claren- ce Darrow and H. L. Mencken. Scopes now lives i n Shreveport, La., with his wife, Mildrf!d. who accompanied him here to .,,.ak at Balttlle Mrmoiial Institute. He stiU has definite ideas about man and his origins. "Everything has to develop and grow -It's Just 1 feature of animal life that il you doo'L devtl>p and a:row, you die/' he Mi. Thu~ ... Aprll 30, 1970 DAILY PILOT 1 Rollers--~ v(>id Earthquake Lo~ses ? ~· · SAN FRANCISOO .(UPI)·:-gathered lo commemmoflte bulldin& foundalioM lf9!!1 side · -'I'he engineer ~Id th e . Question' J:!ow dO, 1'-0" llOfl a th<famous disasl<f. ol J.~ •, to ~~-~· • .• -0 ,, Oystem c.n,P,e /lealined Into a hua:e akyscraper,frQm l)faying Caspe's ~ 1 il.~to··~nLi.1 ~ l'.J the h(t.e~a11 · ~w_ butl~, • QouJd be In clpigerously dur/08 an earth-earthquak~ne boiiiJ.p..n,, cii>uit " Is Ir~~ in oliler~ wlUi quake! Answer: Pyt it •on an array of roller bearinp sit-red to the buikliog up abo.vC some reinoaelinJ. · roller bearings. \'ting on· an undel'lfOU.lld fowr causing· I.he upper storie's ~1-~;;;;:;;=;~;;;;~ Marc .S. Caspe, a pro. di.don .. ,< • ,. ) ,.11·. sway;~iwJ-..1 r. :c··.11 feuiqnal, engineer .In Belmont, The bearings would be loose-TWO yeaf.s ago., Caspe said, · "DTl'l'Ol has tes~'the idea on1a ~m-ly fastehed with steel.·contro.l' •be -~gaq3Df.s&ud¥ • .an-~'liola.. ··NOW f'AD'' ~ter program aocJ '!-!·t h· rods 'sothatthebul1ding.would· tiorrsYsttrP'".,•cb wou J:d -~-~-"'5"~ stmulated · ~.:!.~,.r p,n g remain stationary . .,~ .,r :· .separaw_1,.jNlJdU)t.JoundaU90S .Jli;-1_1.;:=..s enough to· be ® ......... ,.,e. · wihd wop1d not be.enoujh to from .the: buildinl at?ove. The , ~ ••-..- The' slmutated; b trl1 d l•n g make' the 'bbllding ~"move, but ·· ilolatioft teebnique:1 aQQws ithe • 6~ ~ equi,~ped ·with {011er Wii'ings durtng ·an ea'rlbquake,><tbe oon-. bui)dll'll to ,~. lateral. rpo-,·~-~· j •• ...-;... ridei out ·'lhe .•.•,qu,ate '' trot rods Wpuld ezptUJ:I ··~· tion-o!-t1p~·tl\nclres ine~ ... _........... .._. ,sffi90lhty,,accorcµae to Caspe .. contral't al!owing'tbe .~· directio;~~· . . · "::,.--...:.,!\ WANTED! Men And Women With A Desire · · To le On Televisloil. ... ·." .· .. >,RE YOU ·ovER 217 '. . CA!'f YOU TAK~ Ol~ECTION S7 ;• 1 ' ·rw•.-.1 Productions,· Inc., l1 'Proud 1 • TO •Aftnovnct Ttt. Openlnt i Of, Our New . lll)tt~flOO' JALENT POOL for ,ADULTS ' , · ' · ·•TO · Aj/OITJON ON-CAMIRA " • ' ..... :CALL 714-s47-6Z51 l I I I , 1 • · ·TAKE' ·~1· PRODUCTIONS, INC •. .. , . . . ' . AOLLYWOOO,. CALIF. Ca!pe's .repOrt, rele~ in to' ritle'.·with tbe'tfemor. . cUJ)e, • power plant anct '• . "::.it.L%'"1-!-. several engineering jOoroaJ~. Ca s p e said the most. f~ deliener, said a \ocal · D?:~~~· came during the· week •?'>en destructi ve movement in an public utlllty company is stu-• ....:;;"'-"':--. P.1; c-..,. ~--....,._ .... c.....;.. fw Ntwe._,. ~ survivors of the 1to1· Jan earthquake is lateral ground dying the feaalbUity of the :::,=.,-;-, =~ Fra ncisco eart ke motion -which pushe s ~~aystem. ".Toda y's Stocks Today • 2666 HARBOR.BLY~_·:· 546-7080 COSTA MESA -WlEDAYS-Ylo9 --~- ; • SA1"•PAY 9 f!» 5,30, ,, . \ SUNDAY 10 to 5:00 NYLON BR.,SH 0 Com1 to Jt im1'1 1r1d 91t tl.1 br111lt lv1rv funny.) 0 Nice f1,.th1rl'd a nd1 for srnootlt fi,ni1~. • 0 f11ll bodiod for 1up1r 1hok11. ·~. GLIDDEN SPRED HOUSE PAINT 0 Folk1, thit it p1inl. 0 ( N1tur•lly, 1 k1rtlw1r1 1tor. would look silly p1nhil(9 fin91rn1il pol!1hl 0 011ick dry l1l1I for 1xl1rior wood, 111110"''· m•n'f' color,. ·697 .. • GAL. GLIDDEN ENDURANCE HOUSE PAINT - 0 K11p1 your "'"'' tl11di11g whit• for Y••""· : 0 Cornb.-ts tH1t1•I•, '"ilcl1w •"' '"'"' ... 0 To1i1tb oa b•11 p•i"t tti.t 'i••lly li¥•s<11p to ih 11•m•. ' J47 GAL. STUCCO ROLLER sn ' -• D E•t•111l•11' cl11I ""ill 4•.•ll ~01i1r c•ill1191 .. ah 1,1••· 0 ' Suri l:it'k'tl•nclint1•11 • t••l•ri119 l•dd1r. ' ' 0 FluffY roll1r hold1 lobt ' p~111.. • 99c ' 1• ' 5 TEAR· fiUARANTU HOT WAft-R lilAllR 0 M1jor 111"'1 'llr1ll4, f11lly 9l11t' li111cl, I 0 Anti corro1J111 rod, •1111 1!<111t-off1 r1pl1tt1 hot"'''''. '••'· ' 30 GAL. 40 GAL. • 44n 52 ~· . • " ··"' ' ~,.1.~ ~r •. 1 .. • .. ; " ,,, . 'tJ.: ·•· ' • '1 ' • '!"Ii \ ~' ,.._. ' ;, . · ,_ .. '·.; '•' : . . ~· f·' .• • .. , . : r ,. . . . ' HINCi TWO . -. . . .. , (GE( .'THAT'S A .FUNNY \:VAY ·TO SURF ) ·' ·, • r.· ·· , . • HANG.ING --~I L.I; 'IOl!tL -' FIY'IURES %0-~ OP: 'l !:· ~ ' \'1\Ca~. . ' " •• ' .,M,,.,,bf4 .~11~ ..... lflrll Mn L ,,-,. I••· -"'"'· If"' clletf ' ......... ,.. ,.111 Ill ..... .,.,) . . . . .,. ' ~ .~ . '. ,, .. ,,, .. ,, . " ·' . ' •' . ..... _ .... ~ t I " . ' ' .' . . ,SPONGE PACK AND . . . .. . ...... ••• # ; -v• DUSJ PAN ... :'\ O· A.1..,.l.hh, "'~ f•'iorlt.._ ~ 0 L•tu H1ik'IY" l'p•il9i1 ,,,J 0111 lon111m1 lll111t"jMn. 0 A ri-11nt 9 colnbin1tiot1, bvt for 1uch 1 price, 9r•b it. • ' ,· 5 _9c ,.,.J. ..., • ' .•• f •. ·' • 20 &ALLON PWJIC:TftA$H CA_N ••• > a &111r111t1.J•fof ' y.,,.. CJ w. 1t1M liMiml ,.-.,.,., 001 1olil. b flut r1ol loo c\01.1, v1ch, 111ch 1 1m~.tr.! . . 229 ... • , "' · ·1 ,r ··) '_ .. ', •.r1t1cot 11 l~CH ~ ' ROTARY MOWER " ,c:i E•sy •11 th1 \.11clt)1I 10;. , p. Till th. Ir.id lt'1 I l'llW · 1tYI• mi11i bilr.1 111d 111 •; '"ilill hl Y• •f if. . 4295 X·I ' McLANi: EDGIR/TRIMMIR . . . ' ,. ~ ... • D Trim• ""h1r1 1vi11 th1 · t)Oplt1ri C•'\'f f t f ;• _ 7495 .. 0 Ch••t•• trifnmi119 frotil f•tit11•'f• f1111. 0 Sur•• trfJi h•it411, fiitf-~:1witch. a '""'°'"' , ••'1 · I tlfl'l•t f• 4h11t by k184. . ' ~ ' , O On• is 11 glcbe, the other lco~s lik1 •n ind~or porch lite. · 0 Either is r1ic• for hall , entry, or •nYwhere. 0 Dnl includes the chain. O ~nd·th11 pric11 ma kes me lig ht · up .. H tover. '-,. l ...... 99 EA. ' . ' 24 INCH FLUORSCENT FIXTURE 0 Uftd1r t~1 co1111!1r li9ht for fol•1 ""ho Ii•• llti1191 1bov1 bo1111I. 0 With.switch, co1d, •11d COYlf. a•• WOOLITE l1di 11,0y~11 •11.ow tki1 sluff, F•ll'toui f.r 1 r111011, it ,,.u., "'oflr.1. O• ~O l~~i~~. 110' 119, ~o 1t1fflri11'9 OYlf '1 r11i111J 1t ••1t11iif. -: 99c 131/1 • -:oz. 0 You'll b1 ""•Y •"••d 1f !ht li1ld .. ith '"···· a Pl11jic jllOp·~PI lit flu1~ ""h1111 not ;,. 1111. 0 Gi~, lull 22 fool cli11111f1r '••1r191. 59cEA . . l ' PVC SPRINKLER PIPE 0 It pey'S to hava co"fidanc•, but "ot •• w•ll •• em bazieling. O Wt're coofldent this pipt will defy .r'odants. 8 Wo.t't rust Of' rot i" the ground eitht,, r l but be cer11ful 9oln9 out of tha store. l V21NCH LIN. FT. LIN. l'T • .. • , ' • .. J ) I • • f IWU PILOT TIHJrsd11, April 30, 1970 .Largest Ensenada Fleet Way *****************•* MERCURY SAVINGS end loan mociatlon on the Sirlt Paints & Wtoieiv; ...... tD9Motalcltfl• -··"'- YOUR CHOICE s Req. Ust $5.98 Now thru SUNDAY May 3rd 34 EACH McCartney-Paul McCartney P••I'• letftt ,......., pin J ,.... of color pkhlfft. h1cl•det--l•~Y U•ff, TNt w .. w .. S....W .... Y•i-tiM Dery, ("'f NI ... Hot As S••, G..._ J-M• W• We l.e..ry Oe Te .. M-Mlll A...-ke, T9dcty hy, SI .. AtNg .h1M. Try A LIHle Kindness Glen Campbell H__, c._ a.q, htt. SI .. New, Por My Wo ... ·a Lo.,.,, All Hie w.,, hrll SI...,, Hoflle At9'11 te Mo,. lancl of Gypsies-1 -.limml Hendrix n. ..... "'HeMri1 • .,.nnc.." Raindrops Keep Fallin On My Head !tr 1. J. ,.__ A~ •-11 WIWt Here Comes Bobby- Bobby Sherman Johnny Cash ·at San Cj)uentin - Johnny Cash American Woman - Guess Who SPECIAL SALE $287 YOUR CHOICE GRANT PLAZA-BROOKHURST AND ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH Qpen llan.·Thln. 9 o.m.-4 p.m.; Fri. 9 Lm.-6 p.m. •UllllA PAllK ~UlllTllllllTOlll •EACH Mercury S.V~p B~I-· • MercUIJ S.V~p Bldr. Valley View It llncoln . £dlnjor at Beach ********* ******* THRU MAY 3rd SUNDAY .. cotr~4 Super a· Movie ctmera fastest ZOC¥JJ in the wetf/ SALE GAF ANSCOMATIC SUPER 8 MOVIE JAMERA AutOmatic Elect. Eye, Law Light • Warning Si CJ n a I, ln$tant Cart· ' • Sharp f/1.7 ---.,.. ..... -tod,. ... llc '64 ridge Loading, Electric M o t o r . Drive. -· Th-Ccll ...... r --SUClllSTID LllT ..... SUGGESTED LIST SALE $29 94 •"'• Mllom.Bai~ llWI )'OU .-rfritct ex,_... • ldghl ,.,. •• ..........., .._ ••mlna .ign.r to ,,._ calll ......, Ughl .. loo cUnl for 8hootJng • ...,_,o-....,. ,,_ ..,P _, ~re ..... trJgger IMChMiem•f111111pullll lncHc.tor ..... wt.ft .. .. nmnlng through C.IMf• • Electric motor drift $49.50 SUPER a MOVIE FILM INSTAMATIC COLOR FILM 12 EXPOSURE SALE $1 96 SALE 86¢ ANSCOMA TIC CAMERA COMPLETE KIT e #IM CAM•ltA _,... ,_ ffl91d lhlltt« 111 .. ftr Ila"'-l ilt '91' Uy Ille) sth ll'ffl "'9rMllullJ' . • ~ 1111,... .. llfW•fltol • Deftc~• .mt ...... e ~· 1111'1'1 Urtrtcl .. e T .. MA Mtteritl ., .... qlle e UllC9'lllll~ 9Nl'fllfMf ftr -1•11 YNfl SALE s111& Su919'tell Ll1t 14.tS Brookhurst and Adams-Huntington Beac:h STORE HOURS: Mon thru Sat. 9:30 till 9:30 -Sun. 10 to 6 B.OY~! GIR~! from 6 to 18 JOIN THE FUN! IMPORTANT! Get details and Entry Bla11k1 from lnDlt Harbor Center Stares. 2300 HARBOR Enter The Quaker Oats Company Amateur Athletlc Union PRYSICAL FITNESS PENTATHLON THE QUAKER OATS co. ' AMATEUR ATHLETIC UNION SATURDAY, MAY ,2, 10 A.M. FREE Athletic Equipment Prizes and Certificates to every participant I Sl'ONSOltlD By HARBOR cENTER .MERCHANTS ASSOC. And FOOD GIA T MARKET , . , , , , , , I I I I I ' .. DAILY PILOT f) -. W@man io Stay? 'Tragic' Vio'lence Hit,s Stanfor ~-40 Injured . r ..._ I °' I • * t C ngress to Judge Status STANJl'ORI>, CIJll, CliPll - C1aabea bel•-"""-· iq: ID~ROl'C prlllMtilll .... I !°;_ lM ANGELES (AP) - ,:;Crlllfna ec..nadCJ de Lopei. :; ~· -of five American- : • bGra children, may be permit- ~ ted to live pennanently In the United States -provided COlllfeas takes l10 adverse 3C• lion. -c1111. Lcipii, wbo--nid been -lened -deportation to MWco because she entered , lbt country llle&iny In llM7, ' wu· arreated after she applied ~ totheU.S.lmmlgratlon :· -~ belp ii> gelling ! ·--residency papen. ~ In • bearing Wednesday fi crowded with newsmen, ;' photographers and Mexican· • American supporters, t h e f 1uburban Compton woman , wa told by hearing oflker ~ Loull Matlel. thal sbe will be ) pnted the right to apply -: Unruh Advocate for a UllPWionfi~ ..-.... . u-•lt4*•••polf- uon, -will ... up lo~ to decide her •tatuf. -lei ' Congress act favorably,' lbe would automaUcally become a cit!;en ol this country within a-year'.s lime. police on lbt -.._ reoutt.dlnll_ .... . Injuries durlnl .......... - dredJ of dofll. • "=• occumd d\lrinl ,_ boon of va•"wn termed 0 trap:" by •' Plooldonl -Ptlw. The wave of violence enoplod 1oller JIOllce. --10 paGllWt thin& '1-p.m. •. -~ .a!chl aller ·.a Appearance Not Label Of · Radical-Reinecke · ,....,.. bul p!Opl ~ lllt- ln at the old anloo lm1141q. Only -who cbaoa to 1taJ in tbe lobby were • r.led. Seorea poured oot of the bolld•nc when police .,.. riftd. t'wenly-lhree .,.._ were al'11llted at a almllar SACRAMENTO (AP) - Shaggy hair and dirty clothe! on a sfi.ldeot 'don't neoesaaiily mean he's 1a radical, IA. Govl. ' . Panel .Okays . . . Death Rap I dwnodltratllXI there 11 I t Ed Relnecke tokl a Sacramen-week. to State College audience Wed-A' crowd of 110 taunted 10 olllcen In the old union ~~ta Barbara reeently ~ind-=== he met Jn a CJISSn!Olll -were clubbed. Bui U the hlo "l\>e -~eit qi the shlBI)', ...... upd -.... '""' some ltudentl In dirty or tom tbeJ caref\IUJ aYOkW a poup -· with bar• feet and of ... --the usuaJ fa c 1 .• ,J ao. IU&ed ta the middle.-_ _ coutremenll. But t h e 1 e The mllltanbl tben llroke tn. students were ladles ahd to mailer pwp1 and went SACRAMENTO (UPi) -geritlemen," Reinecke said. on a rampqe. 'they brob The Assembly C.r i m i n a I ''They were Polite, asked in-into the bulldlnc brJollnc Procedure Committee h1. s -tdligenl questiom and ltaMd RO'l'C afflca: ud' broke 'Win-i LOS ANGEt.ES. (UPI) -voted to impooe the death to demonllrale • co..-dowa and overturned deaU la ~ Public educaUon In Callfornla penalty on persons who plant not to cause prob}ema. buC the hallway. 'Ibey broke win- ii threatened with coUapse, bombs which call.Se serious irr to solving them." dow1 at the gniduate ICbooJ Jea Unruh said Wednesday, jury or death. The long-haired studenb be of bullneu, the blRorJ comer ; ' • Of Shared Cost unless Gov. Reagan "ll\les up The urgency bill by met were "motivated toward ol the quad and Enclna Hall. to bill promile" to share Assemblyman W. Craig Bidd.Je obtaining a good education, Can Cll'l')'lng poUot aad acbool costs on a 5G-50 basis. (It-Riverside) won committee to imprOving the world In flCalty ~ were atoned ~ Unruh, a Democratic can-approval Wedn esday · on a which they must live. That u t1!eJ drove around campua. dldate for governor, criticized voice vote and was sent to is a fact that we la govern.-Ooe officer ncelftd a minor Retgan !or proposing tax the Assembly floor. It would ment, the leaders of the nect wound whea bl' by a relief for banks and cor-take effect immediately upon establishment, and the people brict aad wlndlhWda in l1N • pcntlonl yet not finding "one signature by the governor, if in general today seem nit» police Can were brobn 11 : ~ peMy'' for education. passed lfy the legislature. tant 1o accept," Reinecke Aki. wve tine wDlowl m. a....,uc. .~;....;.--'-~~~~...;_~.:.......__.:__:~~~~--'__:~~__:__:;.;..::;;.;;;_;;.;::::.::.:..:;=::::;;:;;; '. { i [ : y I ' . ;,· i. Complete alterations included MEN.aalet Robert Hall put you in SHAPE at our voluntary- controlled low pricel ROYAL HALL• DACRON.AND WORSTED YEA11-ROUND SUITS 95 Comp. value 150 The ideal suit for round- the-clock, round·the- calendar comfort! Expertly tailored of Dacron polyester and wool worsted in a full-bodied blend for super-stamina wearing after wear- ing, season after season. Choose from handsome two and three button single-breasted models with more waf.<t- definition for greater fashion lm'portance. In a •hiking splurge oE new Spring patterns and oolon ... siusforregulars, , £harts and loop. II OPEN BE M' SUNDAYS 11 TD 5 COSTA MESA, 1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th GA{iDEN GROVE, 12372 GARDEN .GROVE ILVD. ' I • men. Palo Alto police issued a mu- lual aid call that i..upt more thu f1 lawmen on cunpua, In- • eluding me•• of the elite TAC squad from tht San Fran- claco department 30 miles away. Thirty policemen reporitd being struck by rooks and on• went to the hospital brW- ly. PENNEYS ••• Coste M ... Harbor Shopping Center .. ·aND-OF-MONTH --. -· '-· - H1nA11 W. 0,. All Yew ....... s ••••. Styl• .... 1.00 Now3~99 ·All )'our favorite ahllpes and 1l2t1. In ratlaJ'lll, visca atraw, even wood. l'Uhion ahadei or just naturaJ. S-W Wei 11% OH Oii Al OW 1"9 1'llle. ...., S•ll• _ • .... 4." NOW 4.24 ! .... "" NOW ·s.09 Bare and be&utlfUI new 1tyle1. For light footed, care•. free comfort. Risht accent tor any wardrobe. • ·1::: Cit1•• -Jewolry Now .991 • Or1t-M.00 New 19.99 ·.-..------------------. l OolJI Miii Holr Dry.,. Orlt-1J.t'i I OolJI ....... ~ lllilt PMcHs Orlt-10.00 I OolJI '-I Styteil c:..1i.- Now 5.99 New 3.99 Orlt-12.00 Now 3.99 Or1t-7.IO 3.99 11n Sel•llay O.lyf All l.tt MIO'I Spol't Sllfrtl 0. Salo • ... l.tt Now,'°' ~o Never·lron woven fabrics. E&ly-care knits in favorite styles. In atripn, plaids, solids, prints. Selof Al loys' Spon Slllrts la Nia morlta $port Styln .... 2.tt NOW2 ,., s5 Comty knits, hand!ome woven blends. ln 1.1trlpn, solids, plaids, or prints. All easy-care fabricl, many Penn Prest@ • Orl9. 1.00·10.DD · , Now 4.99 z Oolyl loys' s.s,...i llkn Orl9. H -!I Now -~ , ... 32.88 ' 7 0.lyl M•'• Spol't C-. Orlt-ll.11-45.00 Now 19.88 1 O.lyl -~/Pot ... • Orlf. 4t.tt Now S Olllyl Glrla' Yloyl lal- Orlt-4.00 1 o.1y·1 llK"lc fowonde c:... . . Dri9. 2t.tf Now 19.88 . ;..w .99 10.99 • ~ I JI l ...., I w-·• SryHoll Dr-24 Olllyl Glrla' Dr-Pool Siii~ ...... ••.... Now 2.88 orit. c."-8.io • Now 2.99 . . . _, II w-·1 .... 1 .. o11t1 Dr-. · i I ' O.lyl •irta• llitttr Stylad lfoosn °'"' ..... ,.... Now 4.88 · ' ~. ........ Now 1.99 ..... Atl1rt•tlt Wom•'• Sportsww on..uw.11 ' .Now 1.99 .. Sn .... I W°"'M'I 11..,.._ · Now 1.99 _ ....... c....-.1 w-·· s1y1o11 H••••• Now 1.88 7 OolJI ..., ... -_.,,., -1.tf' Now 2.88 JO Oolyl w-·• Yloyl ,_. - or1t. ... Now 2.99 14 CW,I w ... •, ,_.,,1 .. lt Huls Now s.88 u °""' w-·· c....i - "" Mewl .,,... -SliMs -.. ,,., ... 11 OolJI lers' Slloo CloaoHI _ .. " -s, ..... 0. , .......... . ....... mM Merktll ,, ... Now 1.11 .Now 5.18 Now 1.88 1/3 Off Shop Mon.oats. '+II 9 p.m. • 12 O.lyl Girls' Swoat.,. ood Ynh . or ..... · Now 2.99 fl Olllyl .. ,_. Girls' l»nsn 0r1,. 2..11 Now .99 to Olllyl M•'• Draay Style J- O•lo. '·" . Now 3.88 40 O!llyl M•'a S.., T6 DrOll SM'\' °''" a... Now 1.4411 1 'Oolyl M•'• .... Seit, lt .... Orl1. u .oo Now 55.00 15 Olllyt 'M•'• lotttr Sport Slllrtl. Orlt. ,,,....,. ,No~ 3.88 I 11 OolJf M•'a Ttllo<M DrOll SIKU . -t ..... _ Now 8.88 50 OolJI loys' Slw<ly Dr.,. Up J- NOW 1.88 1t Olllyl lers' l'lloty Tollorad Sotto 0,1 .. , .... , .. ,. lfiw 5.88 . .220 Oolyl loys' c....i .... h Now 2.88 Orlt ..... ' UM Your Penney C,S• 9' Carel • • I - • Jf. OAILY PILOl Thuoday. April lO, 1970 • Political No.tes Comics to Play BadhamBash lly 0. c. HUSTINGS Of .. DlllJ l'I .. SI ... Orange County's home .. grown comedy team, Skiles and Heoderso1L will beadlioe the entertai.Nnent at the Badbam Bar·B-Que Saturday / from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. in Bommer Canyon. I I Tbe family affair, honoring ~ Rep u bllcan ·Assemblyman : Robert E. Badham who is • seeking re-election to the 71.st . District seat, will be an all- • ya.H:~t type a f f a i r . Tickets are available through Mrs. Edward F. Ward Jr., 724 Malabar Drive, Corona del Mar 1 &n.9379. * Another incumbent 1 Astemblyman. John V. Briggs '.. (II-Fullerton) is laughing off ·; reports that be is considering r, the intl'(>duction of legislation •• to submit the fat. of the Up. !; per Newport Bay to county '. voters. . . ~ Bri.gg1' remarks w e r e prompted by supervisor Robert t Battin'• motion to put the t issue OD the ballot. I ''Pllltutie'! • l cantt un· (\er1tan~ Battin 's obcizophrenie r.8'0lliog. He : ~mtly oppose my bill to ' an... the'vot.rs to decide the I fato ol the county Harbor ~ Di!trlct. and yet be advocates ~, JUbmitting the Upper Newport Bay dispute to a vote ol the people. '\ "[ know that Mr. Battin ~ sullen from foggy trunking, ~ but this is ridiculous," says $ Briggs. i * ~· Aod while we're on the sub- : ~ of Assemblymen, Gordon ' Brlcken, a Republican hopeful l' seeklog to unseat Badham, f aays· he's all for "more in- volvement by the voter in the dedslon process." 5peal:fng apecifically ol lei· 1. tmg ;;-;~~ote oo RECORD i Dentla Notices • • • 'sALDWlN :Mtrlorlt S. 8elOWln. llSf Cliff Drlvt, •\.I..,,. ~. 0.lt of clutll. AIN11 36. ~ &uNhled' bY h1111»nd, Simeon1 two '°"''' •s1-111, M1nr11nc1: JtmtS M. a.1~ ~win. ~ Be1cll1 d1119ht.,., LY-s. •W1Ww, C.1Nr1y, Altiwt .. C1nt1M. ~ '1ce1, todrf, ThUrlldtY, S PM, f'1dtlc i v lM C"-1. wllll C1non DcNttll• Shltrt 'oftic:\ltlnsr. lnumrn911!, f'1t lllc: vi.w ,,,.. <';morfll P11t;. Ptclllc: VllW Mol"tlllnr, 'Oll'Klon. I\ DRUMMONO + EHh L Onlrnmond. 315Di Cry1t1I Stnd ~ Drlw. lelllM Nl9"1I, Olt1 of dNlh, !Aprtl 2t. SllrvlYN bY •W1f1, Gr1c1 L Orvml'l'IOndl '°"''' L-E.. of Dini • POllll1 Evin J. Orummo!ld. Cti.tswortt11 : dl11111t11'. Gr1c1 E lite Or11mmond. l .. t.9iw. Nlwtll 11\d flvt 1r11'1dehlldnn. t ltl'Ylcel. Sl"""'I~" ! PM, Abldlnl S.Ylor • Lii""'""' Cl'lurtll. El T-f:ntombm1nt, ! P'1ciflC Yin MtmOl'lll f'1rk. DlrKl.t b1 • r1cffk: vi.w MOrt111r1. • • • fnvestlgallon Fund to aid local law en!orcemenl A not be r measure nuld requin drug manufacturers to put trademark! on legally _p~ duced.1 dangerous dn1gs. A third DUI would add the drugs STP and psilocybin to the list ct dangerous drugs. * The state ol ~ had been receiving notice from Assemblyman Robert B41dham (R-Newport Beach) who has introduced a bill which would tax jet fuel used by ..... rnercial liners. Badham says his bill would levy a hall-cent per gallon the Hart:ior District iMue, tu on the fuel. 'lbe funds would lben be used to aid Bricken · sayi:: "Badham's Ojr planning of future conimercial position 1 to the idea of a popular vote should make the ai~ faciliUes. Badham sa.ys people sit up and ask il he this m~r~ g~ b~d-lD­ really desepres their vote in ~ hand with hlll bill requiring the June primary. e~ery countr to ha ye. an "Peraooally, I tbink the pe<>-airport plannmg comnussion. pie c&n and should be allowed "tl to dtclde on the issues where A. A. Va n Pet.ten ol Hun· possible, especially when tax tington Beach, Democratic dollars are involved." candidate for the Assembly A$Semblyman Kenneth Cory (0-Garden Grove) has in- troduced legislation aimed at curbing the drug menace. He is running unopposed for the Democratic nomination for the 69th District seat. Cory has included three bills in his anti- drug package. One bill would provide $3 million for a Narcotics Sp.ecj1l Irom the 70th District, has come Out for liberalized abor- tion laws. "I defend the mother's right to determine whether she will bear a child," he Slat.a. The editor and publisher of a monthly newspaper, The Liberator, Van Petten says, "I am willing to pay my tax money to make available free abortions • , , to anyone who wants them, rich or poor.'' Gem Theft Suspects Get Separate Trials SANTA ANA -Two men accused of t.alring ;ewels valued at $250,000 from the Lido Isle home of millionaire sportsman B r i g g s Cun. ningham have pleaded suc- cessfully for separate trials. Superior Court Judge James F. Judge ordered Gary Leon School Fete • To Aldrich ORANGE -UC Irvine Oiancellor Daniel Aldrich has been awarded the seccmd an- nual Oran1e County Mon- t81110ri Scboolbouse Award for his work in furtbe.ring ei· cellence in education. ' Dr. Aldrich received the award in ceremonies marking the lootb anftiversary of the birth of Dr. Maria Monteuori. Dr. Montessori founded a leacbiog method oo which the schools are based. R. C. Boiles was the reci· pient of the first Orange Coun- ty Montes9Cri award. He is tile M-year-old publisher of Freedom Newspapers, Inc., a chain of ·21 newspaper& which include the Santa A n a Register and the Anaheim 'Bulletin. McGinnis, 32, ~atsw911h, to face trial May f on Charges of armed robbery, burglary and assault with a deadly weapon. Judge Judge schedul· ed M~ 14 as the trial date foc Ronald Herbert Gordon, 32, Los Angeles. It iS alleged that the two men burst into the plush waterfront home of the Cun- nlnghams last Sept. 10, bound and gagged the cou ple and then ransacked the house . Investigators said s e v e r a l pieces or the valuable jewelry taken from 343 Via Lido Sood have since 'been recovered from underworld dealers. Both men are held in Orange County Jail in lieu of bail st at $31,250. Killer Set For Hearing SANTA ANA -Convicted killer Leighton Stines pleaded guilty to lesser charges Tues- day in Superior Court and now goes back to state prison to fact a parole hearing . Stines, 59, ol Garden Grove , offered his plea before Judge James F. Judge and was sentenced to one to 10 years in ~· He had served almOst two years of a five " years to life term when it Fitchen, ·.K. eeps was ruled last month by the , . California Supreme Court that C t P t Judge Charles Bauer erred ODD Y· 08 S during Stine's original murder trial. SANTA ANA· -William A Superior Court jury at • ' • Fitchen, Ofange Co Un I Y tbat .. time convicted Stines of agricultural commissioner and gunning down unJon official official sealer of weights rnd Robert Davis in a Santa Ana measures, has been rea~ union hall confrontation that ARBUCKLE ' ION pointed to the dual posts for ended with Stines shooting the Westcllft Mortaary a 4-year term by the Board wrong man. He made !t clear • • • • • l . . • • • • • • ' l l • • ·! • • • ! • • • ' • • • . . . ff1 E. 17tb SL, Com Mesa 0( Supervbors. that his bullet was intended MMAI Fitcben'r third mponsibility for the union's bu siness e as county Air Pollution Con-manager when Davis stepped BALTZ MOR'ftJAJUD trol Officer is not affected between the pair in a bid Ceron del Mar OR UGI llJ"b;;;y;;;the;;;;;;;;";;;appointme;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;nl;;;, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;to;;;;;ca;;;lm;;;;;St;;;in;;;es.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ... , Colla M-Ml W4H 111 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY lll llwdway, Cllta Meu LI Wiii • DILDAY BR111'11ERS -lfqlGB Vallq Mortu11y 17111U....Bmt . Bm1tinrto• Beadl 141-'1'171 • PACD'IC l'IEW MEMORIAL PARlt Cemdsy ._, Cbaptl llOI Pa<IOc View Drl .. Newport Beac•, Calffnla -• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL F'lJNEllAL HOM11 'llllBolsaAve • WtllmbdlttllWU5 • •11.•r•11 •IF! •WT•-•ftiml-m "': --•--·11111··--·- c:ra.AIG COLOR TV : ~--~f'£DK MOR1\JARY • Laru• Bole• IK-tllS • ' . • • SU a.-· llMllt • SMITllS' MOJITUAll1' "'_ .. 275 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA PHONE: 642·9742 S1,..i119 th1 H1r~•' Ar11 SIM• 1911 1" o,.. M"'~M. t.t ' ' ·FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16'1'31 Harbor Blvd. (Next lo -Zod.y's) Phono: 139-4570 YOU'D NEVER KNOW THAT THEY'RE FLOOR SAMPLES Hilny, for itntastic savi~ 011 lerriflc buys! One Of 1 kind! Fl~ Samples! All, with the famous DrtU lllttnss' 2 llx Sprilll'! Similar saving$ in all stores. Economy.plus King, SAVE HOW! Was, $179 •••••• NOW, $)29 Spacious Kipg, A BEST . BUY! ! I Was, $199.95 ·1 ... NOW, $146 Beautiful King,,QUILTEo YALU[! Was, $299.95 ••• NOW,$246 Superior Crafted King, WOW! , Was, $379.95 ••• NOW,$297 P11Ct IHCLUDES OrthO·Pak ... Fieldcrest ... iron King size fD(I sheet and fitted bottom sl1eat • 2 King Size bolster pillows • 2 pillow cases • ](ing Size Mattress pad • King Size metal frame with easy.roll caster> PLUS ••• Double Bonus: King size quilted bedsp"'ad plu• King size Head- board (notas illllltrated) with your purchasi of any ](ing Size Sleep set SOME DAMAGED PIECES MANY MORE NOT LISTED This outstanding group is fitt!d with VALUE.PACKED BUYS that ~e absolutely grut sleep.findelS! S"'1e With small flaws that are barely detectable! Scrne are slightly faded, but •••. 111111 the famous ORTHO Mal1nss 'Ill SprlJll! ·· A dream of I Queen, BARGAI N! Was, $129.95 .... NOW, $)Q7 Thi s grea t Queen is 1 BUY! Was, $199.95 .... NOW, $)58 Get Queenly 1le1anee and SAVE! WH, $249.95 •••• NOW,$)96 M'Lady's grandest Queen, WOW! Was, $289.95 ••• NOW, $238 P11CE INCLUDES OrthO·Pak ... Fieklcrest·nt>iron Queen Size 1op sheet and filled bottom isbeet • 2 aueelt Sill bobler pjl!aws • 2 pillow caseo • Queen Size mattress pad• Queen Size metal frame with easy.roll castm PLUS ... Double Bonus: Queen Size quilfed bedspread and Queen S'!le headboard (not as illustral!d) with your purchase Of any Queen Size S~ep set. OUTSTANDING VALUES FOR BEDROOM OR GUEST ROOM .Here is reany uemarfutble grouping Of s"'1e urrnatched sets•nd regular Fulls and Twins! AR I! sensational O~o 88'pftisl For llolll lllttross "'4 lax Spr!Jll! A solid comfort Twin Size, Money Saver! Was,$69~5 ....... NOW,$48 A l!lmendous VAWE in Twin Size! Was, $8'3.95 .... NOW, $6950 A truly great Full Size, Dollar Siter! Was, $79.95 ....... NOW, $59 ~ich quality Full Size, FANTASTIC! Was,$99.95 .... NOW, $7750 Pl!CE IHCl.UDES DoublLBonus: Plastic Headboard (not as illustrated) and metal frame with eas)'IOfl castars. VALUES THRU-OUT EVERY STORE• WHILE THEY LAST F• 4 llys OD(J, you will be able to settle down ID tmheard of sof•bed SAVINGS! Each wiUt the famous ORTHO Mattress. Huny, for best selection of decorator fabrics, colors, trims, styles and sizes -King, Queen, Fun & Lave Seat ••• these will go FASTl Available in most styles-similar savb1p In all stores. Traditional ityles Sofa·B1d WH, $319. NOW s22905 Early 'American style Sofa·B•d was, $279.95 •• MOW, $J9995 Me diterrane1n style Sofa-Bed w.., $259 ••• Mow, s179os Contworar,Lstyle Sofa.Bed . $21995 Special Double Bonus .Included ••• get genuine Shepherd' casters and flu.cl amt""' with 111t purchase of any Ortho Convallible Sofa. " l-IUJtJtg .•. §ik N(}(JJ-Olfl! LAKEWOOD 4433 Candlewood Dr. .(Across from Lakewood Center) ht COIMlltwoo4 Skp Phono: 634-4134 ' ANAHEIM 1811 W. Lincoln Ave. (Just East of Fed Mart') Phone; n6-2590 OPlN OAiLY Ill 9•SAT 10 6•SUN 12 6•1MMEOIAT£ OfllVfRY•CREOIT TERMS AVAllABlf •BANKAMERICiRO •MA SlfR CHARG £ ~ I ......... liiiilliiilOiii.::::..-..:o!==....:'-........................................ _ ........ .._ ....... ___ _.~-~~-~-~=--' __ _..!:i.__.-..::..11 _ ..!> ~ - - -= - - - '1i · · .. •·••• j -· ,. ' ;.'.I . • •. ~ v~ PeJen~ :J-a~hion manor IN LAGUNA BEACH • Thursday, Aprll 30, 1970 DAILY PILOT 14t-,. .. Me111ories Linger .·-Ruyal Marriage· ~ti.Jl,' St~rs Commenu LONDON (UPI) -A million an escort. He showed a 3'rllt· penons lined the streets Of mi measure ,ol .lndepende~ Londoo to catch a glimpse In lnsilllnC early in the mar· of the romantic «iUple and rla&e on the. r.ij:bt_to "war.k. Uie ooh,,. and ahs Tippled and ·'the Queen * capitul•ted around the wor.Id as the bells de!plte tfie tradiUon ·.that-the of ~Yestminster Abbey rang roya1 family does not •'tngaae In trade." , out the news that a royal to it. Ho II often In Jin York on photocr1phlc '"-and adom the city. 'l!le princea Is aoother lan ol Ntw York but cmnot bru"k" _., from her commitment.s. They have the same frladl. Fot e1ample, Richard Burten. (See ROYAL, Pap It.Ill . princess was being wed. Snowdon works as a free . That was on May s. t!llO, lane~ photographer ·and in IN LAGUNA tele·•~on, and •--ambltiona and now Brtt.aln's Princess YQ> .,... N'«::~ Margaret. the petite "lJrtle as a film Jll'O(lllcer. Hi! e~ s~ter" ol Queen Elizabeth 11, tnp ·are •· lraclion ol the Cl.&. ... and the surprise man of 'her Jncomt ol the print'ess who J7t ...,. c.-H....,. choice _ Anthony Armstrong gels a state allowance of Jones, now lhe Earl of $43,200 a year plua monies .1--M.-~ Snowdon -are old married fropt her ~al private ~ ~.1)511 folk observing their JOth an-invettrnenla. · (Ci nivertary. The Snowdons pay no rent ••11£ lH or tue.s on their bouse in 5·...,,.1 .. • The memvry of the surprise!! WE · r~U"':TS -even shock -that greeted Kensington Palace, • "grace N he I P and favor " London home allot· ~..-fie t news o r I n c e s 9 ted by the n. .... n. The palace, ;.i· S ~ Margaret's choict ol a hus-""....... Ca1111\I band lingers tiven after a of re I a t J Ve l y modest Drled fruit• decade. dlmermon,,, represents a .L:f~•n<'I::..: ... ::::::=:::: melange o( their tastes and When the en&aaement was living style. announced the same qu.stion 1 GIFT PACKABES ANCIENT POLAR GAP FORMS WEIRD ROCK IN SAHARA Eroding Force of Melting Ice Etchtcl Giant 'Ton9ue in · Desert echoed through ,all Britain, the Margaret decorated the WE MAIL nEA"fWllfl[ Commonwealth and the world: reception rootns in blue andll L-.:::.=::..::;.:::.:;;;::::;:..-11 "Who is Armstrorur: .. Jones?" green with traditional antiquei-;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ PANT SUITS ., e Alex c • .._. ' •Unt~I B~ll Freezes Over?' Sahara Was South Pole - NEW YORK (AP) -The . icy South Pole or 450 million years ago has been found in &he broilinc Sahara, the resull ()f continental drift, a. team of scientists reported Monday. Scientists from 11 nations said they have concluded that the hottest part of the .world today was once the coldest. "There is no question about It," said Dr. Rhodes W. Falrbridge, Columbia · University geologist. ''The ter· ritory that was the earth's south polar reg!On in the Up- per Ordovician geologic period i9 now the central Sahara." Fairbridge announced the finding in a scientific paper read at the annual meeting ot the American Geophysical Union in W~, D.C., and relened in New York by C.Olumbla1 FIELD I<XPEDmON 'I1le team · readled Its con-- clusion after a field ezpeditlon to southeastern Algeria .last January, Members e.1plored the area by airplan~. Land Rover and on foot for the AJgeriln Petroleum lostitl&e, which is Interested in oil reserves. Eons Ago dy deUas produced by .mhlting ice and cracks resulting from deep lneilng. ';It was eVideot," Fairbridge said, "that we were dealing with an aN!ll once covered bra large body of continental ice. Its PJysicaJ dimensions in North Africa eztend over ·4,000 kilometers -from Morocco, titrougq Mauren- tania, Algeria, ani:I Niget to Libya and Chad." WGH TEMPERATUllE8 ~-furniture. S n o w do n con-II Th e r e P I Y ~ ' • 8 structed a modernistic study photographer" -did Ht.tie to In the basement, decorated ' clarify the situalion. Bather• with leather and steel and it served to dee~ the baf-fancy woodwork-all his own. £1oment. For the prioc:ess who . was tJ:Un1 in line lo the throne He has ·an adjoining pho- hld dlosen to wed the least tographic laboratory. They likely ol all the men who have separate bedrooms and ever had sued for her hand . bathrooms. There is no room in the Some 'Of the courtiers al Buci:J~ Palace were con-mansion for large parties, so .. -• th pol gatherings generally a r e . r~ to e extreme nt limited to eigt\t or !O guests, of asking journalists whit they with food o c c a a i o n a 11 y Jcnew about this man. Anthony · pretlared by the snoWdons. Anmtrong Jones (he added Sometimes Queen Elizabeth a hyphen between hls last two drone in alone for luocb or names later). ,,... dinner. Prine~ A n n e • Bit by bit the. extraordinary Mararet's niece, is another facts were st.itched together. sometime visitor. Pr i-n c e Armstrong-Jones was a Charles, heir to the throne, phs>tographer, often seen in rarely, vi&its, nor do the other a black leather j a c k e t , royals. FREE ESTIMATES COLLEN'S CARPET ~loor •nil Window Cov1rint- Corpoft -Droporio1 -Woll P•por• -U11oleu111 -Tr<1111tpor. '"t Willdow Shiel•• -lrttloor I Outcloor Cerpeti"t· U you ore h1•i"t troubl1 clKicl. ing w+iot typo of corpot ;you w1nt, ot whit q11ollty yo11 110M, ,top I" '"cl ''' Ill•· FllANIC COLLINS: SOUTl.!.,CORS'I 0,.. Niptfy, 6:41 , ... The 1cieotiats w-er.e from Algeril, Brull, D en m a r k , Englllld, France, Holland, Poland, Russia, Sweden and West Germany. A second U.S. member waa Dr. Paul Potter of the UnJverslty of Indiana. The scientists placed the then South Pole at the Tropic of Cancer near the border pocket of Algeria, Libyi and Niger -wbert temperatures as high air -187 degrees have been recorded. scooting around the Bohe'.mian The marriage patter:n of the O>ebea district «i a motorcy. Snowclons seems to be they cle. He had a !tudio In a do their own things, either converted 3bop on the fringe together or lhdividually. of London'• working class PrlnctSl Margaret di.!likes her Pimllco district. His family husband's traveling but yields waa comlortably placed but; ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;~ neither ridl nor titled. He was 11 of medium height, limped a little when Ured bec;,ause of childhood polio, previously had been the companion of a pret- ty Chinese girl. He w a s goodlooking In a boyish way. •• 357 S. ~ Nl9ir-, --e 4'4-IMO MASTER CHAR&E .,, IANKAMERICARD WELCOME l!lJJ, CASH Ill , YOUR POCKET Sell unwanted Item. with a DAil..Y PU.OT Cluslft.a Ad. PHONE 642-5678 .. . .. .. ... .,.: :; ~ ·The New KitehenAlll Dishwas.her wiUt exclusive SOAK CYCLE . tkles y_our soaliint I automatically_,_ M.._ S•ltd., ,1 141.,.-. BIG-ALL NEW Outdoor Adventure Richiird Harris . ' I Judith Anderson ' -IN- "A MAH CALLED HORSE" IN COLOll.-U.TED GP' I lU.lufd.11 The ~'kikhen clean- up job h•• .. 1way1 Me11 J'e!Z¥1Vinc cru.ted-on food. from pot. pu;i.a and C&lllCI• 'rOlell. A;l' .oti:letime11 from d*-. Until now. · Now,. the KitchenAid , Superba mode1 hu • 11ew esdulive Soak Cycle that automatically 1011.kl and loo1e"'9 1ncru1ted food•. Then it wMbeil, rinae. ind dn. 1verythin1. l"'"-iLll'li i.*te1i.r1e11 Av•lllltlle SPEARS FREEMAN APPLIANCE -• ......,..., u,.,.,. ........ I Me .... n.,..,. .,.. 7:)0 ON Petfonnw• • 1:00 Fri. .. Sett .• ,.. 6:45 s ... c..till. .. ,,_ 2 HILD OYEI 2ND Wiii Dustin Hoffman I -~ia .. ~-2QJ ''Artistry in Moving'' for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway .. T fi'I: '· ·WA y P.C.S. PROFESSJoliAi.., I W'or ,si/iyicE 492 2993 CARPm Ir Fl.001..CLEANINCl " .. . CALL COLLleT WALL .To WALL co ...... llPll·--FREE PICK·UI' •A.OOl'la CllLI•• .. THI lllDVS11f -':ow8 »0 ru.u 61MDAL HOVlf CUANINe FREE ES11MA TES :t. ~ ·, .. -:--' & DELIVERY • I A1-l1ted Servlcet of LANGLEY JANITOR SERVICE 'encl RI UKEMA •RUG & CARPET CLEANERS SERVICING SOUTHERN ORA~GE COUNTY PLAN'f. LOCATION: 152A Los Mellnet, Sin Cl-nle ' • Beneath the hot Sahar• sand, Falrbridge said, where the sand bas been swept away to expose the rock, thett are great para1lel grooves running hundreds of miles 1cross the ancient rock -the r<SJlt ol gllclal ocllvitJ that "'*"" on- ly and.-1 polu ice cap., Acconling to the -.,tat drift exp11118tion, Filrt>ridge said, the South Pole made its 7,~inlle.\450-million-year journey to ttie Sahara because the crust ol the earth moves, and "continents can fl o a t around the earth just like icebergs.0 The dtift theory~ widely ac- cepted, holds 1haL Lhe IO-t"'4l' mile thick crust ol the earth Is a series of vast plates that alide over a fluid zone. Tho process ls slow and ll!I mechanism a subject of con- troversy. ONE CONTINENT At the beginning or the journey, he continued, South America and Africa were one continent. So, apparently, were Antarctica and Australia. "What is now Antarctica," Fairbridge said, "was pro- bably up near the equator is tbe Ordovician ieOloglc period because sedimentl we have from AntarCtica l'how rich coral deposits." The North Pole or that era . he said, Is now in the middle or the PtcUic, somewhere south of Hawaii. Ill lbe1r esploratlon, the scienti~ uld tl)ey found san- . ''This area Is full desert." Fairbridge continued, "but in many places the sand has been swept away to ~rpose the rock. Ir you are flying YoU can foUi:nf the glacial traces for hundred! ot mil'es . "It Joob lfU u eoormoos bulkloaer bu ~ped Over the roct, where,-.. llf•e l>eeo made by tile JllOYtm<lit ol ice across the rock "8'face." The area of the Sahara has . been d8ted .. million years -compared to the earth's age of about 4.S billion )'tars -by meaaurin( lifetimes of radio active m1terial md by loosllr, the leolorbt reported. And the princess k>ved him, SO whit mattered that be W&I a stranger to tbe public and thaL the mitusWm ol the royal family to .the match was distinctly muted? Ten years later, the mar· riage long since has ' been ac- cepted by the royal family and the Snowdons are 40 yeara old and the parents of two attractive children -Vlacount Linley. nine In Noveritber, and Lady Sarah Armstrong- EL CAINIO TEllllS SHOP OPEllllG SPECIALS CUSTOM STRINGING ' YICTOlt IMl'•ltlAI. H T" Or ... NYIM . "-"""' $9.00 AllTop--T-........... Super Tennis Cllntc All,....,._,_.,..,if. i..c...-111 dlllll limllt T.V, CALI. ~ARY ar 101 4f2-711f · 242 A .... hi M•S. Cl•narre Scientists haft speculated about the area aioce French and Algerian oil geologi!tS found it nearly 10 years ago, Fairbridge said, nie·fiis:t con- centrated reteardl ~me ooly last January, he said.' Jones, six May J. , Ther'e sUU are no Close ~~~~~ associations between Lo r d Snowdon a n d Buckingham P1l1«. Prince Philip, Queen Eliiabeth11 husband who was among those .,,. llrst oppooed the marriage, is polite but does not make • friend of his ex-pbotograPfler brother· in-law. Snowdon meets his in- laws on such ''family oc- casions" as Christmas at ·Windsor Castle and the 11un- mer holidays at Balmoral Cas- tle in Sc:Otl1uxt. ' MOTHER 'RING LESS' LONDON (AP) -lrllhman Andy Farrell put up a. scaU<1Jd for worktnen to clean' Queen Vk:toria '.s statue in rrOnt of Bucklnghim P a I a c e and discovered tha( the Great ·Queen wears .no wedding ring. Neither does Motherhood, one of the three figures ilrouod the . queen. 'lbe others '. are Trutb and Justice, a l s o He escorts P.rlncess Margaret on such state and official occasions that, require IOllEY TO LOAN PAWN SHOP G .... eDlo ..... T .... riDgless1 "'Ibe di9Covery wu ' quite a -k," said Farrell. RACITI S • DRESSES • LINGERIE • SLIPPERS • HOSIERY • COSTUME JEWELRY •'BEAUTIFUL AT HOME WEAR "We'll look into it.'' a JEWELRY &: LOAN Val ahl Chin spokesman for tht Ministry or 322 M•• st. IJi-2610 U C 8 Works and Public Buildin~ •--"""--· 360-·70 S. Coa1t Highway 494-4393 IN LA~UNA IEACH ·~sa~ld~llld~oa~~Y·;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~ In White Houseli e B-d• '.6!°~us e Tri•111ph .. Yo_ ... WASHINGTON (UPI) - The White House has added a different piece of furnit~ to the Green Room -a Baltimore oecretary 111 I e d with a rare 1et of china believ- ed to be moJlOlfamm"! 1wllh Andrew Jacbca'11niti1.11. Tbe aecretary was brou1ht from' the pi'ivate quarters of the execuUve mansion so that the china could be pl.it on display. The White House .has been unable to confirm the dlina's original owner, but the aet Is believed to date from about 1820. 247 Br<>ldway Houra1 l11.m.to JOp.m. L..-. 1Mcll--4t4-tf74 ( SOUTHERN ORANGE COUN T~'-S OLD STi ESTABLISHED M0TORCYCL§ :DEAtfR " Our MECHANICS HAVE AN AY!RAGE. of 10 YEARS EX .. . ' ' PE'RIENCE. The-y .are an~lous to prov• .,.ey can make your bike .run faster and better. , J. BEACH CITIES -CYCLES ' . 521 N. II C•mlno •-1, San C_ .. mente 4 .. ·6741 ' • ----~ -~-=-.._,____,._ ..... '""'" -~-=~--·-------------------- ' ' ' I • . I ' ' ' • , ..... DAILY PILOT Tlttlt'sd1y, 4Jl'U ,30, 197.0 ) • • Did· ,~e,neral Cosier ~ill Di111self~ . ~""\"'' ll".t abOOlotety disproved but the and Ann7 til1e bulls. . Lelc:b ays·Custer was'cliu-&eneral's wOllllds wu verifi~. ~ :,}~ wel&b~ o( evidence is against ~f Eagle aaid the burial ed . ood run -at IAllle &rt that alao aopports the I ~" • · ·sACRAMENTO (UPI) il. • party woold not have !<alped Bli Hom hy bfl lndlao wife's !heorY· held by many lndi..; GENERAL CUSTER TOOK HIS OWN LIFE Slocnc l..n.n Chief Eo9Je Revi .. 1 Contl'GYer Pollution -a Trigger , . r.-• . rf'oEarth's Warming? . ' 'WASHINGTON (AP) -Air from waste ·heat from con- pl!llutioii · will trigger a ventional or .nuclear power cjtastrophic wanning of the plants.1Carbon diaxii:te ta ·~ earth 1rit:bin 200 years unless ducecl from :burning o f man checks his plunge toward petrol~ prodticts, including aB,o v'e.rpo p u lated, .in-gasoline.·~ · dmtrialiud planet, a govern-Mitchell.said burn4tg all the ment weather scientist said world's fosSll •fuels and tdjlay~. · · ·. masSJ.ve ·use·10£ nuclear power t111e release. ol increasing plant's will "throw ~prodigious ~· -pf carbon· diqx.ide amounts " beat into the at- ~ tbennal pollution i11tp ,the mosph~e. arfd the · global a~~e . tbr~atens ·to temperature is going to ·go dwlge global' weather and up." : ' ~ the ·~ic ice cap, At i>reSent; he said, man's f\Docling' wide areas, Dr. J. activities "h3ve not. upset the 11Jurray Mitchell Jr. said. balance of nature in a seriouS He said man may begin to way .is lar as .changing the nDtice the change by the end climate is concerned." · ~'this century, .Mitchell S{tKI nature, in as ::Mitchell, giving his fOrecast yet -.un~ ways, j s ct pollution dangen 'in ·an in-responsible . for 1 one degree trn outlining r e m a r k s wanning ~end in t b e JJlannecl for delivery at the Northern HeDil.s~hei:e between ~~ysical Union's IMO and .1940 B.n<f·a ~oQe-half ~· meeting, said su c h degree 'cooling •trend since that Jiiri)s could come even if 1 time . · min Jeams to control air · . "BUt ·if we ..-ping'° On ~atlon caused by ,,..11 dost with 1hb htad\ollt(.~ into . plftides in·industrial smoi:6. ..,a m.ore beavUy,J>OPu)~ arid ft. meteorologist at t be indllSfrialized world, "ft> are· »n v t r 0 n m e·n la 1 Sc)ence . only a few ye8ri awar from ~~ Administration -the time when! human '"W SISA -Mitchell said carbon tivlties will begin to contribut'e dlODde and thermal pollution significanllj to world climat'e ~ a "greenhouse" at--with the strongest evidemie ~c effect, lend.inf to pointing to a renewed warm. Jili8b the earth's absorDed ing trend between noW t and ~heat radiating ba~k into the end of the century." -. tlle space. ' ~!'JbermaJ pollution comes • ROYAL • • • .• . t Cootinued fro m Page lf.A) •• 'f.V commentator David Frost, ~me American film pro-ctucer' Ken Hyman and ~ TV and. radio people, Jitwspaper columnists, actors, Uesses, pop singers and the fashion crowd. . ' Prince Margare~'s old pre- ~e "set" -tht Earl Gif: Dalke.ith, the Marquis of J!landlord, Billy W a II a ce , ~ Douglas and others .,.. are married, settled doWTI p scattered, Her current W' fiends rooetly are drawn from lbowdon'• circle. ;. ThroUgh the years the Saowdons have had .their dif-~ences aDd spats ·but prL· lably not more than most ~les. In 1967 there was a serious ?flR that some oi their Intimates tbcoghl inighl Seed to a breakup. · :"; It is ·Dot known when the tnowdons again may visit the lrniled Staf<s. but they have •~' trip on tap for June. They ,re to visit Yugoslavia as the o( Presid<nt Tito. It an umJJUal arrangement for • r .......... CClllMry, bul tbe litnoWdom have the flexibility mix-wtlh anyone and Buck· ~--Pam b certain the . p will he auccessful. Tony Tovatt Sez • Nlv!r a grGWI lro"' a TOVATT '""torn.r. Wt'VI 1!rffled llonn1Y and rollllbHHr tor owr « yNr•I W!>ellltr lt'1 • ~· or port1bl1 TV, colol' Ill' bllld;.,.nd.wlllti', )'Oii e-n h 1 v a eornpt.tl conlldenc1 Jn TO. VATT'S· lntl1IM1Ct on llfidltf ellllfO. -· ' 411 .... It .. Mllltl ..... , ..... ..... , .. , ................ -'""" f 62·1416 SMILE· A· WHILE DAY CAMP POil ALL ltOYS & OIRLI AOll .. 14 • SWIM SCHOOi. INST. • Sl'OITS .• eum e COOICOUTS e RIPS e DANCIHG e nNNIS ' NOW TWO LOCATIONS: LOI ANGILll & OttiNGI COUNTY .-..rt tf Th A-a. Clllllllllt "-*'""' Ol'INl.N. DA Tl JUNI ,1511o CAMP HIADQU.uTIU 1tsn llACH I LVD. That old yarn about Gen. George C u s t er committing, sutclde ,at Ole battle of the Little Big · Horn has been ueraveled: again. He aald CUoler WU shot CUsler If ~ had JmoWu he tlsW, wbo -lhe tbo1 the · al"...,, b' ' OOCe In ~ left brw' a~.1 killed 1.:-.. AU because "I geberal 'befo·re .... kf1..t;-. 1ener ~. 11 own ~1 , "~ • ~ . •m-• "" him --:--, life _...'lilt ,.,,...~ • . · once tn the left temple, but d1ans regard suicide as a bad · ... ~ to ,klucb ~S"" Of 1 · U.. Cumr waa known to be rlghl-.omen." '"! don'! think be (auet ·~--• ' ' · F 4 a RIC S · handed. Forthermore, neither The chief said he gathered Eagle) ..!> a• jUlliflcalioa," "II' i:.=· ot"tbe w~ showed powder burns, his informaUoa by 'interview.. Leach ~~· 11'lbere was no ti . 1 ot ~ !972 S..th Cout Hl .. ••Y whic~ normally occur when__ ing four Sioux y.'trr.iora. who _ WJ.Y. U fjpdine ~ • 'tlllC ~ ' Latuu-4,,_~ a gun is held close to the rought at Little Big Horn as was whose .•• tl)ey. were 58 J::'71~ 11.~JJ 26161-C a.. ,u leM J The 'laleSt allthorl\y Cln the s~ect is Chief Eagle of the Teton Sioul' tribe, who says the facts arer in : a book he has written called "Winter Count.", 'Ille , 45-year-old I n d i a n leader-said a Sioux warrior sllot Custer in the shoulder June 25, 1875, when 264 niembert , cf tbs 7th Cavalry died in 'the Montana massacre -~'but it was Custer, using his own-tw.o ·hands, who finaUy put a bullet throogb his temple." body. well as "hundreds UPQD hood· all left in litle pieces • •. • ~t ~ 1 lliallOriCa1 Mlul.,. VleJ.....aJ1 • .i - Chief Eagle outlined h1s reds of parens and grand-the old women took care,~~-;;Y·~· ~· ;;:·~·~'·;·;;;i;;;;;~;;;S~;::;~~;;ii researeb on the subject before parents•• of the Sioux who of that." " I~ the Comstock Club a n d were there. On the other hand, editor ·. In Washington, O.C., chief hiatorian .Robert Utley of the National Rark Service said the i;l,licide theory ~·hu been kick- lng around since the time ol. the · battle •. , it's one of ttie ·favori~es.'' Utley, also an authority on the legendary general clnd author of "Custer aad the Great ControversY," aaid the ~cide theory / ca~ be ' elaborated on his statements Qllef Eagle, WhO makeis bis \ Vivian Palladin of the Mon- during a telephone interview. home in Pueblo. Colo., ident-tana Hialorical Society maga- He said Custer committed ifiecl the participants as Black zine says Custer was not muti- suicide because "he was Feather. Good Voice, Dewey lated like the other soldiers. afraid of what the SiOUI would Beard and l<lne Man, all of That is wby the nature Or the do to him, wllat his superiors South Dakota. would do to him for disobeying He said the last. surviror, orders, or what h~ own troop$ Dewey Beard. died Nov. %, Gem Discovered would do to him." "1955. Custer kjlled hlmselt to The chief's story resulted culminl\e a 16-19 minute in still another version by skirmish as part of the main Mike Leach, 21, an Alcatraz battle, the dlief said. resident who attributed it to Aftl!!rward, a burial party his 97..yNNlld grandmother in of Indians who did not know South Dlkcla. that Custer· died of his own She claimed Custer took a hand took two small scalps Sioux wife who bore him two "the me of walnu'li'' from children. When Custer's white the general before assaulting wife headed West, the general the corpse with cavalry boo(.,1 killed his Indian family. COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) - A peasant in the Ratnapura district of southwest Ceylon has found a ~cat's er.e (gem weighing I( OWlei!S and valued at more than '330,000,· govern- ment officials said today. The officials Said the .government would arrange for sale of lhe stone abroad because there is no buyer in eey lon. ICE CREAM NOVU.TIES ...... --- ~ SAV E ON GIFTS FO R M OTHER'S DAY s1299 ASPlRIN . TAB~!-.... ,"' . . • \I P~ICES GOOO THROUG~1 SAT. MAY 2nd. OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK America·s Fastest Grouuinn "' ·5,-u;;,·"9' c'f.:in FOUNTAIN VALL.Eli . ' . 9107 GARFl.ELD !Garfield & Magnallel .. ' NEXT TO MARKET IASKET 96~-4401 $399 s599 .......... Vl BADMINTON SET -~------ • . ' .. -:: •• '•' :.~ • • ·' • • ' < ' • j • . ' ~ • ' . • l ~ 'f ~ " r r ! t · fonanal••ioner Live• "'1 8a11 Killian.:--'' f Po ution • • • B1;0~~ !i;llt._!!\::1:1.• ~'*'* -1'..,ort :,~~'111~~ 1 "I .-,'! 111 l'a qilliot ~ £"~C' GI~ ~~i:,·.:r:.,~ It. "1lle «!'11111 couhitl ~!.= ~~ ~.,! '°'~ ~ ''"' • • inllliOn cbllrman Denni 1 over, oor· pool ls full of black .i.t.muned the tmad ibterut per!DlllDt ..,., ~~ I Carpenter. Carpenter qu.it hl.s dirt," he said. J. had in Ml5;Sfon . Beechcraft ita sat.u~tion point and the don't*"' W'laltlnlitl·tlapptn po1t to campaign for the 1be fO.yeaHld Killian mov· did not consUtute conflict of practicality ~ using a dif· Jn ~~~I uri say I'm Republli:an nomination for ed. to Costa Mesa ih 1911 and ~teresso t. under tbe law, ~ ferent mode ct transportation · for ilr and noise Slate Senator from the 34th three years 810 moved to . ld It anyw13 becau.se it such ail high speed trains. po~.. no. Diftrlct. Newport Beach A graduate nug~t have c1realed an un-"If ta1peone is going to M ban..JWUln, Yi~ani C®n· . Kl)llaq, a lawyer, says ~ ·of the 'USC School of Law, conifortat)le 51 uatlon with the able to level""' i fain that ' ty11 .ne•ett iifPOrt com-is well aware of the problems he bu pracUcecl law in Santa oti;;rJher com.mill issloners," ex-..,. ...,.,, llu ,... definite o1 pollution from 1be airport. ADI r. flve•,oal'I. : P •• ~ ,an-· .,..... whlsu tli Mrilund I IGii mpli idtll u ta what his new He lives at 1181 Windward ·... kW.1 h f.. · ,_ o mt ... ....,rt com-by an, l&e jeaf llO, ~en ~ k.'\' Pilot i"tt: ,.- "'".'-elltlil. Lane in 1be u-yc .. st section ~!!I f•Y• ~.~.no ' mafti,. .. He -ti, is to ftne1 lie wold ---• so ,m"'h "c..,,ft ~~I )IACA!I. 1c11T1illl• -" I i _, •~ "' "'"'° in•••-.of•1rpo~•. _ '. II ' :=""=~::=:;::'.:=:======== ... ====; perlcm. alont 1111 linlt of ~0ta.... n .... 1.:19--'"'-oi avl.. ...,.. " al'-.,,.o eommls1 on r, n la iM edunt)' · u .. Y0-1 • '-"' _ al~ lit dooo 11$ .prtV.le -"l'nrnot willing to Ible out "ol ~' 11 lhii doen 't • ' t I I ·'' • . . plane!. "YOu might say rm~ the J)068ibU!ty of eslabUShlng happen, we're going to have a perennial student pilol I've an airp>rt anywhere. Theu's to bave air ltavel or aomeone never gotten my licetue," be not enolijlb \nformation on is golnfl to suffer." · .• said. what the futun ol kllJipOrta-Rtgardltss of the cocn· .,. 'lit new "Milunlssioner sai d tiori will be to dd that. Jni!sfod's . •Jr • p I an n i n g lit ~. U ,!IWcent Interest "Wo cab't just nile out Mile dt<:islons liuuan iald he feels ia the lltc!lcrlft conceiSiOil Square, Sabia Ana Air Faclli· they ougbf -to ~ reViewed ty, El Toti, iM AJMiltos ot every fl y_er'ol-tFn years to • any sJte on Irvine tanih. I'm be 1~e --;are ltiU Jh line Open Hou8e -~ sabsfied we can .. that wiih tbe transportaUon needs . . •. ~--, stlJl ,1",<!'I 1be needs ol , of ihal Ume. • , , ""i <olJllltUnll1, '"lllere biloy be a llhle wbM Schedo.led ! All~ Iii want U1I alrpianel "'· k.ovt al~iahe! that t"1v.i a couple of nules away from at mach tkree and take off our homes,· but you can't vef'l4cally in llilence. But unUI At Il'Vl. ne satisfy everyone and still have that time we must plan our ajr transportaUon. airports to handle the mOOe il'fbere-won't be anytb.Mg · of air travel we ha ve today. IRVINE -Tours, n:hibU1.._ ~bout planing avitUCln If that rn eana 1pendin1 ii , ~~onstrau..,. w\ll~. •' in.the countt • ..,Dolcia lo buy •P. lllicl, thett I .. for an-· . ~le JlliJll,ls .g'!lll · •~d"beller do ll .. Yoll • ll~e May :II, lrom to \lit" .. ry dllllcillfi'' KIU!aii ' ays shrink ihe tlie of, io ~ til .. m. ; .• , ~· i -· • .Sut ·once yau1ve Jet. '.1111 will miilt ijlo, of tbe· •IMll .obvioua tM community grd\f u.lt : com of lbe t1t J lb , ..._,__ '.~-t_e~re lh'e' hnlii onli, it's lmposslbi. Id / ·• 1far ,on lhe t'¥tnl! • .. -.,.. tr~iM'~ needs the facilities." • ' ~ eaDt•:' ·J~. '( ~ . Labcillli!!IJ cl~ the llbrar,1. llialeot resldelilt halls, heaftK eeb&tr, and c:Ahlt ~~-::..~lheoi;..i~ Mqiybe •.. with Dc;iddy's hel p you can ~ive Mam mie ' ;~·wilt be ln!n's of tlie nuclor re'aetoi' operated by the chemistry department, ex- hibits1 and experimen t s rela~ to the medical educa- tion ·~am and ·• 1tudet on shoW. · 'EIJoi1 -mentlij lllnd ··':i$,~~· ~nt!, a .very important ·;Present this year CHARLES H. BARit. ' ;Qt· omtl Oii 1111 • ~,' i!ri>oi>'1~ " lnd 41bPiays 01 ·~ls « lutule liulldil\jf~ Will b ~ fe~tllllll .•lheopen~'6, l ~ '1dlf6 miy brtlti I t.lk1I ·' ~···r a picnic iit CfihpQS . . . . STARS Sft!UH9 u :·~e-ie I! l · · . i • Grl!Hf tltlll m -ttiert "l!lli"'ll ,_,.all-Jll ..,, H Ian oM prMI --ot·• T11-YlltM tr YU lliifliM '""· -Ir -""Mot ...... " ftll 1UIIIJ, .... ., ""'11Flll •n•illl 1t ·1-11 •Ill",,_ . · . . . YOUI LOW. llAIDllAIE. mcHAll Wllll lll1* -BllYillll POlftll @¥!." 419 if %" VINYL HllSi ffyloo reinforttd, •'111 ftll1. biL J~··llll'· (l!IJ lllMI. filll Wt ....... UI 399 Dlclllt!ll ~r. M:lslon -"""'""' liv• iMtl« ~ Fourfl!> 11111-lilL ..... , ....... ·t1'J f FULL •PLY'· *lit 6ualtly . ' ( ROSI -499 llOOT FEEDER lfitll l&tJcl CllJridlh· Feeds ~ t. IOOis for quick 11> . ~ .............. 1117) 1 HAN D NEW" 2D,OOO Mill ' t•'"" • GUHANTlll IDNDlff{fli~i • 2, LAIDl'& tNSTAlLATtOlt l~Clllill , 3, MIClO·MIASUlfAll4DluMS . ' 4, ADD llAll FLUID AS Nlliilt 5; ,AIC·GRIND LINING . . - 6 : 1fi1D SYIT!M I tlllN IAt.1111 , •. P1.ATE ~S NEEDED 7., GllASE I PACK Willli H~l-tl 8 All CTltNDIRS tNSPlcTID fMcLilillt ' • MASTll.CYLINDElt , • 9 • IOl AT! WNllU I ADJUST ilala POlYllTIJ . & llBJJPl.AIS Punc1ut; .. Sea/anti . . . HOURS: 9.9 Mon • .ftL NOW OPEN In C09TA MllA ' . 9-4 I.+: 1M luft, " .3005 :HARBOR BLVD. co•ll • 14k• • Muo•~ .• 11, .. 1100 -I -. .. • -. • f • ' --• ' ' t l ' I • .. i • . , . ' Jj oA)t.v PILOT ~· . .. Thursday, April 30, ,,1970 ' ' STARTS 10 A.M. FRIDAY MAY 1 OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. " ' ', > ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' . • ' I • tOfT4 . . . . , 1831 NEWPORT . BOULEVARD ' ' . ' . We .ore closing our store el I Bl I NEWPORT BLVD., ~nd ~ave made drastic reductions to sell out 5000 p~irs of men's, women 's and children's shoes. All sales will be first come, first served basis. All . sales final, no refunds or exchan9es. Sorry, no mail, phone or C.O.D. Use your Hemphill Charge, Baniamericard, Master Charge, cash or check. DRASTrc REDUCTIONS SAVINGS UP TO 50°/o _, • " • • ' _Here are Some Examples of Great Shoe Buys GOLF SHOES Men's and Women's 50°/o OFF KEDS alG. TO $400 SI.DO Women's C1t1l1no One Gr°'up , SLING HEEL OPEN TOES . NURSES "SHOES SOo/o OFF 2,000 PAIRS CHILDR'EH SHOES YA.LUIS TO $6 & '1 $1 6.DO • WE HAVE MEN'S SIZES TO I 4A • WIDTHS TO EEE $J,SO VALUU TO 517,11 '.Men's and Women's . ' ' DRESS · SHOES 1/3 OFFi • WE HAVE WOMEN'S SIZES 41fi io io. WIDTHS TO AAA TOG: • WE HA VE CHILDREN'S yYIDTHS TO EE ARE MOVING TO 54 FASl:tlON ISLAND > • " I • " ... " > --·-------L-------_;:__-==---___J • • • . .... . r .. 1-.,;Al·ums-:.c·~·~·r t •. ,: ,t Jo·lly Sail , I . A happy sail with jolly companions is Qe,ing 1a~s1,1red as members ' o(:u1e Southern Orange County Kappa Kappa ·Gam~1Alumnae lay oUt a course toward their next benefit. · · . ',~., · • -.~ ' I ' -A Kappa Kruise will be launcbed-Saturday;--Ma:r ·9. from th•4 Bajboa Pavilion. , .. , ' J ~Be~~;inning at 7:30 and continuing ~ntil 10 :39,. P-m.-~i\ne1,11,t>ers and gue~ will board ship for hourly moonlight grog 't::ru1ses ·JhrQugh the sparkling waters of Ne,vport Harbor. e.~1• • Meanwhile back in the galley, a buffet fit for the Queen"s.Navy will be prepared' and served at 8:30 p.m., and Estancia High Scllool's Stage Band will pipe tunes for dancing until midni~ : :·41" Proceeds from the cocktail cruises will .aid th( Wor1 being done by '4e. ~rovidence Speech and Hearing Clinic in Orange. . · t 'Taking the helm for the benefit are Mrs. Robert E. Nichols, San- ta A.r.18; chairman, and Mrs. Ronald L. Brown, Orange, assisting. '" :-Comprising the loyal crew are the,·Mrtfes. Duane L. Hillyard, Anaheim, design and printing of invitatioos;~John P:· :Nottol, Co.stm-. Mesa; mailing; Allen Goody, Newport .,Seach; tickets;,_,William M. Kull, Corona del Mar, decorations ; Clifford1l{, Ehrler, 'Villa Paill.j hostesses; Gerald F. Do~n. Costa Mesa;.pu~Iidtt..:-,n~ Richard RameJ .. ~~ •. la, Corona del Mar, cnuse treas!lrer. . t : ~ • • • _,_ Serving as skipper for the Kappas is Mrs. Kdtineth C. Sloug ,_ Co~ del Mar. · .. ,. ' ' .,,. , · •• KAPPAS. ~RUS IN'..'.. .Arrang\lig·cocktail Cruises whlcn:flll bene-° ~ :-fen G9oor. mom~ of the .Southern Orange County Ka~ lit the P.ro~dence Spee<~ ancf'Hearing CllJiic , Oran'i!t, are (left t. ~'l""118 A1urn11ae.~soc1ation. Members and guests w.1ll'b)i~oii~d.eot to right) .Mrs. Richard J\Bm~~ 'I.Ir•. Jaijtes Casey 'ahd1 !lfrs. Al-· ~gi)iijing a! 7:;io ~·8!· Saturday, May 9. ,,. •··• . • ""' J . . ' ~ ·stock ·-' :'!'_ •• ~~ . •. 1 ' , An <lkt.fashloned General Store will be open for business Saturday May 9, when the P~tter Chapter o( CARIH (~dten~s Asl;hma Research tnStitute 8.nd Hospital) stages its anri'uat Bid 'n Buy Lun-cbeoh. The .merchandise offered In the :slore-will include fish tanks_', toy airplari·e s , haibecue&...an<L weekend trips , as we.If aS'boUtiQue items and art obj~s.' (_ Custome?twiU gather in the Bal~~W/ at 10:30 a.m. Ior ljlO! · 91 the Bargain ~ lable<i laden w I th tr~~tuc1:1 . Is jewelry and origi~ •• acu.lpture, then· b\'0"'1. ~IL )Unch is served at riOOrk .. ' ., . . ;,. ~ Dfu'ing thettuncheon a varie-tr~o[ gOods ·will ·be ><>Id by auction and Jaekions for men afid ~D Will be paraded' among'· tbe' ·fllncheon tables. ·Piir..es ·will bei giveri aS the finalet While the' Bid 'n Buy Luhcheoo •is ,the plajor fund- raisi~ e'(_ent of ·the chapter, the ~ der the direc- tion of ~ J\llen Condon, wilrft ~I · the year lo stJPROf( ~facility in Denver whlcb ~ asthn)alics _· of e"1')' ru8-l't no CQ&L '\ ~ known',for its · · re,ea.tell, tn\9 the allergic dtse~ the hospital is a pionet:r 't-ta its field of treating intracta0le asUuna, the most serious '~, the allergic diseases. • ... AnyOAe ' t#'istmig, further in- formation on • the luncheon may call Mn. Condon at &ff. 1138, '. ,, ' . ' • Future So.Id at 1n -. Auction "' ·1 .. ~~ ~ OLD-FASHIONED F N -Tlte hands of the clock have been turn. ed back several ,decades and an old-time General Store is about to be opened under' spoftsorship of the Pac'esetter Chapter of Chil- dren's Asthma Research Instituje anq Hospital. On their way in an ,.J '1o,1 ... 1 1 \ "'. ' • !I \ 1'')~. : '1 ~rt :.r~ old-fashioned fire engine to the grand .opening of the store are I\ 'Pair of 1"old·timers," Mrs: John Conti '!lid 'Mrs. Paul Ba'mes (!ell to right). ' • · · : ... Annua l Award ,,., .,,;i:.;.. . ' ' Ke ith . Gaede Ligh ~.' . • • I : I t,j 'l !~ The Torch of Ho p&.,,. Keith M. Gaede, noted Orai;ige County,_ Ian~ developer and civic leader ~ill receive the annual" Torch of Hope award from Ute ~ National Board of Trustees of tlte"l"Cify of Hope Medical Center during a bantfuet tn .hfs ! honor Sunday, May 17. · · . j The Balboa Bay Club will be the setting · for · the. presentation. which wUJ be attended by prominent area residents including F . Don- ald Nixon, honorary dinner chairman and William }!. Hadley and Frank Michelena , din:. ; ner c~chairmen. ' Gaede, a resident of Laguna 'Beach,· is a· ' '1ong-tii:ue ,contributor ito many civic and phil· · 'anthropic grotlps. Re is a dir~cto? of Child .. ren's Hospital of Orange County, vice chair .. ·i man of the boaid' ·of trustees of Chapman· 1 College, a "director· of the Santa Ana Boys Club, special representative to th~ .Commi~ ~ sion of California, member of the Republican State Central Committee and a member of · the Governor's Citizen's Advisory Committee'. l ' ,; • I , The honoree a1so serves as a director ol I California Equestrian, Inc .. pfbducers 'Qf th~ , annual City of Hope International Horse Show. 1 and is Diamond Hor seshoe chairma n .for:the; show. i . Ttte b3:nquet, also a benefit for the Ci~ i of Hope , will help raise fund s for its,Ne.w ·Horizons program of expan sion in pptient I cate, resea·rch and education. · · . The. $18 million program is expandi,ng, the City of Hope .efforts in fighting c8ncer1 Jeu· kemia and heart. blood. chest and 1\erei!ttai"y J maladies. ,, I The City of Hope was founded In 1913 and ~ has tr~a'ted thousands of patients from .the ' United States and abroad as well as making , man)'. original scientific contributjons to med- ical pr0gress through its hospi!fls and · lab- ora1ories. ' . , i J t( J. f . . I S~ge Advice for Parents Co tne sJ ro n')·M6uths of Babes j DEAR ~ -LANDERS: Here's a , , t t ' • ~ worlc.•!Cfazy Ws-wh,n'J hef._'are on the ry on a conversation. ate you are J1ieruled 11 a better rtll• message fot .. H~ lt," the mother ot: a "' rugtit shUt they sleeP during the day. Yesterday I.he baby cried and woke tloUhlp the cbanct1 are •good Utat.itky t.eeoage Cop-out. "'Keep yourself clean. When they are on the split shift they them up. They called on the phone and wW cooperate. The ~ la 1 ...ti Ji Res Pe ct <1 l.d er Pe 0 P1 ~· Accept sleep at unpredictable hours. We never screamed, "Don't you koow um is Sun--commnnlcadoa. · responslbl~ty.1be "?rid doesn t owe you kn "th . day?" My husband told them WE knew it a~g. Get mtYing, Make a con-ow 11 ey are 1n or out. , tribution." 1Thele &re the SIJ'Dt rules I We have a slx·month baby who mak~s was Sunday but tbe baby dldn t. CONFIDEN'PI.(L TO: WANT' T 0 was raised-by ind l'rn 11.,,..:.a·membtr or marijuana but yoo would 8end him·to· 8 • too. It'1>what we do.with that lousy world .f a. lot of.laundry. MY washing machine Is ' We haveL~ever had any trouble ,with \ HELP ~"': Your l(lter suggesls that your son's · geqero!Jon. "Appaf!llU1 you lhi d hool lo 1 . • .. •l dlt<;ctli above Ol\r ~gh)>or'•~<jtoom-•l ntiiibbor• oefon, •ll\I we ~d like lo you 'l"ih qe .geltl,os vk:arious kicks: u believe all ~gets ,an"*Ji °\:OU a~e-;,_ . ·r n . lI he can get tomep «ce. that-COQOt&., Smolc.q mary11ana . won)' 'have to, run, 4t le~_lWO,Joads e~ daJ~ · r .. vt iW,~ms with tJiese people • you Nllij~t to hetp-auQest that they mistaken. \, ·• ,..., JWby. 'U bet~ wouldn't tiave been out help, • ·" ~The ,net«htiors complain tl~t Uus Jn-becluse we oi1110t Jhove. Will you sug-IO t0'1 r Jt"s obvious from ~ ~ lbit you .smolllng · l::,"t:ni J d\t•~ ".'k' ' U.y dow lhellaw.to·tbut!.oo. which;~· ~,,...With \Jieir ·rest. , \ . ieJ\ a 90lallon? ..J·P~OPLE WHO WANT · , 1 ' • and your husband have 11 .... •your' ... ;:'"~ go~ tiurir ;;;.'i m e ' wllal you .!&euJd hive done Y.WS_ago. '# I !Jill most WOlll .. 'l do my vaeuumlnJ I P-%C • ~.L .1 I -~""" -ti• II••«• tllra ........ too much freedom and 't.o 0llluch ' of oamt ' ' be rellets, kl@ bfm out. I know you JoVe In tlie 'morning ancl\.this also bothers DEAR PEOPLE: r.vne the Hlghbors embr...r II 11.1ove or eh<mlMry? Seed everything. You probably feel guilty Quit a,, king yourself where you failed him, but ~ay~. being for!!'d to make till them. Twice last montb Wllen we hati fW a tQp •I ctft'ee aid 1tt· dtem bow YOtl for the booklet ••Love or Sex ud Bow te because .you have let him walk all over and start to make some demands on Ulat own way tn this world will make a man guests they pounded on the pipes with a •t ptace. on. tit de JOGr lluadry and Tell tbe DUfertGCe," by Au Ludera. you. You also let him mouth off and be spoiled son. Don't let him give you that out ot him. - M. W, OF PHO.ENIX monkey-wrench and beat on our celling vacaamJag wbel they art ai wotll.'Ex· EncJote a Mng, i tarnped,. tell".addrtsaed obnoxious. You say yourson has been old line aboµt lnherlUng a lousy ~orld. DEAR ANN LANDERS: We live in a with a broom handle. This can be vtry plala .... ,. .. can'I control the baby'• envelope and SS cents in C<lfn ,w\UI yw ~-out of two scbooli for tilDokin. Your generau.o inheriled a lousy world, four-fami\Y Ila~ The people below u tmblrrllllil!c when Y• art lrl'IJic lo car. ~ i.t JtO'U!• ,_ llell. Jrllla•*Y .._.. ii'~ of Ille llAILt PDDr,j ~----, .. I ., l I ----J • •• DAILY PllOT Tbur!d.ly, April 30, 1970 ' Horse Racing Becomes Golfers' Watching the thoroughbreds run at Hollywood park are (left to right) Mrs. 'l'.om Lit.et\, l\!rs. John Adams and Mrs. William Entrikin. They were among 80 members of the Mesa Verde Country etor e your Tacatlon ••• ~isit Pat~icia'• and •elect a tresh, comrortable travel-tun wardrobe ••• at1p out ot 7our oa~ and i nto 7atriai •'• '· ~ ~ . . ' . ;! ' , .. ~ ~ . . ,·~ I, I' 11 ~. '· ' • \ , . . ,, ,_ '.\. ' $ _,, SANTA ANA . easywear I easycare newest summer colors crepe polyester dacron supple wilh softness and lightweight cool on warm weather days lo dress up or down as occasion requires pale blue pale pink misses' sizes 35 FASIDON SQUARE, SANTA ANA I Bag (for a Day) .... Cl ub's Women's Goll Club attending the third annual day·at..the-r~es. Feature r.@ce .was the N:Bsa •llerde Handicap. ' Game Wa rden Speaks Lion Cubs Star PudiY lloii cubs will be the main atlraction when Bill York, chief game warden of Lion Country Safari speaks al the Ora111e CoUoty Theta Slgma Phi Matrix brunch Sun· ' day, May 3. Members of the national organization for women in journalism and oom- munlcatlons and their guests will meet for an 11 :30 a.m. JOCiafh'('ij'f In ttie Irvine Cout Country Club, Newport Beach. Mrs. Robert F. Sanders of Costa Mesa, new s paper reporter and market represen- taUve for Better Homes and Gardens magazine, will be ln- sUlled u the new president bf Mrs. Audree Coke of Jrvine, retiring president. Program chalnnan will be Books Opened For Clubwomen Comedy ? Tragedy? Mystery? Whatever's your "bag" for summer reading will be in Mrs. MacauJey Ropp'• bog (beach bag, that · is) as she review• books for menibers of Laguna Beach Ebell Club oo Mooday, May 4. ' Miss Betty Bartley of Buena Park, director of infonnitioo division for Ch a p m·a n College's. World C a m p u s Afloat and other special proj- ect promotlona at the college. Mrs. Ruth E. Dygert of Laguna HJlls will be secretary. treasurer. York, a native of Africa, returned to the Sudanese bush alter schooling in England. He spent two years •CAuiring first-hand knowledge of wild animals and their behavorial patterns. BefOl'e coming to this coun- try, he served as game range r in Kenya's various national •game preserves for U years and has lectured and written utensively of his m a n y natural history and scientlfic safaris in the African bush. A resident of Laguna Beach, he has worked closely with . the ~unty's new Lion Country where visitors will be able to safari ·through winding roads to 'view free-roamin g lions, other wild animals and birds. • Pancakes Flipped · f;l oroscope • • -~· Sag.ittarius _· _ Key _Is Change FRIDAY MAY I By SYDNEY OMARR '"lakUechlal corlotlty Jt a trademark el Aqurlu. More penou· -famoas penou - are born under Aqurt11 thu any other zodiacal sip. 1bls ••• a favorite of tile lite, great EvaaieUne Adalil.t, also an Aqurlan. Celebrltiil bern under tll.11 p""'91Jve, at tlme1 controvenlal, 11111 In- clude Kim Novak, J.U Um· moa ud ForTnt hcter. ARIES (March 21-AprU 19): AcceDt on how you handle confidenUal matters. Family member confides problem. Don't cast first stone. Ar· rangemeals 1 that are made should be discreet. Message very c;lear by tonight. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Frieads who make promises may be sincere but incapable ol lullllllng them. Don't push, preas or make unreasonable demands. What you need may practkally be handed to you on siJver plaiter. GEMINI (May 21..June 20): /lccenl · on achievement, ca...r pot-I, abillly to make room· 'hr yourself at top. Be aware of assets, deflclts. Key is to be realistic. 'Ibis ~ no day to batUe with authol'ltles. Records To Open GeneaologicaJ publicaUons from almost all the 50 states will be available for research during a workshop planned by the Orange County Genealogical Society Satu r. day, May 2. The pubUcations, and many published census records, may be examined and experienced people will be present to aid newcomers, stated Mr. and Mrs. Harry · D. Roberts, ~ chairmen of the event. The daylong workshop will begin at 10 :30 a.m. and con- tinue untll 3:30 p.m. in Orange, and the public is in- vited to attend . CANCER (June 21.July 21): Good Iwiar • ._ loday coin- cides with chance to ouUlne long-range plans. Read and write. Advertise and publlciJe. Broaden borlzans. Refuse to be restricted by narrow con- cepts. LEO (July 2S • Aug, 22): Accent on what Is hkiden, mysterious, even o c cu J t . Break through to knowled&e. Throw light on previously darkeaed arer. You have a right to know bow mooty ll being utilized. VIRGO (Aug .. ~pt. 21): Stress on partnership ar· rangements. Get expert legal counsel. Your hunch could guide you to individual who has necessary i.afonnation. Give a little and you could receive much. IJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Keep going at bas.ic pace. Avoid extremes. You are con- tacted by indivlduals who know just what to do ~·ith your money. Maintain seOie of humor. But do not commit yourself to course of action. SCORPIO (Oct. ·23-Nov.-Zl): Important to communicate - especially to younger persons. Close generatio• gap. Be spedlic. Pr<tendlng "Will not !ill the bill. Tonlilht ')'GU find that your aHecUoa i s reciprocated . SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): You are b~y: on agenda are short tripe, visits associated with " close relatives. Key for day Is change. The open r.otd· and open mind figure ~ntly. CAPRICORN (Dec. ·,Z2-Jan. l~): Ohta.ii valid hint from Sagittarius message." You may find yourseH today wrt,ting let.- ters, responding to calll, being busy correcti•g miscon- cej>tions. Outline plan. Create workable format. . ', AQUARIUS (Jan.. 26-Feb. 18): You may be Called to account for actions~ Have facts and figures 'fea<tily available. Money ls Involved. ·Be perceptive. 0on•r 1permit anyone to confuse you with rumors, hall truths. 1 Pl~ (Feb. 19-Mal'cb 20): Take initi ative , Mold circumstances to 'your ad- vantage. You haye ~ and authority ; make good use of them. New co•tact could evolve into meaningful rela· tionahip. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIUTBDAY you tend, at Gallery Show.>. times, to give Impreulon ol \. . arrogance. You like to FLASH!!~ • I MR. JULI -·JULIO or WHATEVER HAD A TAIL-COMB BLOW IN HIS EAR , AND FOLLOWED IT TO BUD'S HOUSE QF BEAUTY , SEE YOU THER E! 34,40 VIA OPORTO -NEWPORT BEACH 673-4900 from the store that specializes in those hard·toiind sizes. TO SIZE 52 You c•n't go wrong with • sw••fer from Ell• Nor's wonderful selection of suds-loving orlons: long i nd short .•• whit• •nd p•st•ls , •• button fronf1 ind jac~•ts. "°"' ... s1 i ,-----OTHER GIFT IDEAS----- • DRESSES • SLIPS • BLOUSES • GOWNS • ROBES • SPORTSWEAR , Undecidecl ? , •• GiYt her a "good a11y•, tlmt" gift certificate. Let Mom chOOH , htr ow11. Ella . SHOP, Nor'sHALF·SIZE 1805 NEWPORT BLVD. f£i ·: C•·~~ ~~NTl;GT~~· ~~;·St.) EE H11tti.,._ .._. INett to hiter l rOI. f1nilt1rel Ai.1 D4 01.AHGIFAIR MALL, l'ULLERTON 1be 7:30 p.m. meeting in the Art Gilllery will feature 'brio! reviews by Mn. Ropp, ao ,Engllah and speech major. An open house on Sunday, domirtat.e situations. But you May 3, from :won to a p.m. also sympath1ze with un- will introduce a oew Laguna derdog. You are a paradox. Beach art gallery; Eye's Art, often to yourself. LoYe ls due at 1416 S. Coast Highway. A and this will change )'t'm a~ group show by California proacb to many subjects, .~art~lsts~w~il~·1~be~f~ea~tu~red~.~~_!"""°"'~~~·~~_:_~~~_j!!!;i;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fluffy light pancakes and.I. ne program will be follow- ed by an important business rneellng and election of of- ficers. Refreslvnenta will be served by Mrs. Mark Pines and her committee . Pants Bridal Gown Not In The pants bridal gown Is making an appearance oc· caaionally, but rarely for the tradltlonal church wedding . juky ham will compr\,le the menu when Job 's Daughters Mothers' Club, Bethel 157, Newport Beach, spooeors a breakfast Sunday, May 3, In the Seafaring M a s o n I c Temple. Rounding out the breakfast. served between a and 11 : 30 a.m., will be juice and coffee, and tickets will be $1.15 for adults and 75 cents for children 12 and under. Ticket.s may be obtalr1al at Uie door. Proceeds wUI be used to provide bus transportation for J o b ' s Daughers to attend a June convention in Oak.land. K-·MAC DRUG A n d DISCOUNT STORE Open for business durlnq remodeUnCJ NOW AT NEW LOCATION 1804 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA PHI SO HEX STYLI 1 'INT RlG. SJ.04 HAIR SPRAY •:,:,L $1 .99 39' S'ECIAL 25' NOITHllN PAPER TOWELS LUX SOAP 5' ... DOW OYEN CLEANER J2 oz. See, here's a zig:zag: $ ONLY ~ge_f zig-zag sewing machi~ • • tn carrying case. s....wh;1eyou-onlhis versa~le Zi(J-zag machine. U dams. mends, ITIOOOQI ans. Sews buttonsand~ And the SINGER I to 36'Credit Plan is designed to flt ml!!' bud~ SINGER For addrass cA the store nearest you, see white pages urder SINGER COMPANY COSTA MUA l1lltol I S11ftnower s•0·2,J> So11th Coe1t Plti:t COSTA ·M~SA 2JOO Herber l l'ffl, Kl f ·l ltll Her .. or C•"''' HUNTINGTON BEACH . lcll119er et le•c~ 197-1041 Hu11ti~f•11 &.t•h Ce11ttr tttrt.t;-J-r,_ lfetl I NCilll to4afl• SANTA ANA Do•11tow11 Kl 2-3t41 )05 W, •tit St, \ ·~ ~ol THCSINGEACOMPANY , GAROEN GROVE . 9911 Chepm111 SJ0°•010. •. Or•11gt Co1111ty Plett • l ' ' ' ' ' • • • . -' • •' .. . ; ' ,, ' • ,-. ' ' ' . ' . . . . . ' . . . I ol .. . ' Hints f or Reading Summer ·Books _ Frame_d Spring ' Fashions in Book Bai ey, •financial secretaJy, nursery; Edwin Plummer, Bonnets will be presented . and Richard Lu s ~~ ¢or-' liti!rature secretary; J a c wl1e!t the Newport Be11<:h mponding. secretory. ' Coale, book club chalmwi, Oirlst1an Women'.s Club meets SeNlog on the e1:temtOn and N. F. Jooes, historian. 1o honor new olftcera at noon corrultlttee· are the Mmes. BlPfet tickets at $1.'15 each Tuesday, May 5, in the Balboa Edwin White progress may be obtained by calling Pavilion. ohalnv.an;, Ma~rice McOmald Mrs. Fischer, 557-8989, er Mn. ID addition 1o the program and lames S t e t n k a m p , Cain, 549-2631. cffering hints • for summer\ =:''---~"".::::'.0=======---11 reading, there will be a short talk and musical seiectiom by Mls1 Trish Lenihan, national representative of Christian , Women's Clubs. ..._ A ronner rodeo queen, university instructor and pro- fessional entertainer; Miss Lenihan has an unusual style of singing as she accompanies her sell on the guitar. ' 4!ading their first meeting will be Mrs. William O'Brien, chairman, and other members of her board including the Mmes. Walter Burke, project advisor: Harold Welch and Wayne Stanfield, p r a y e r s ; Lewis Mertz, cont.acts, and Harold Fischer, vice chairman. Others Include the Mmes. Tl!urs<ay, April 30, 1970 DAILY PILOT _a ~11~ FRINGE FLING- .Mell• .,.... .... ,atdl ---... ~ ...... .,. ....... f,M,L.. $9.SO ·--" llWllcll $6 i nd $7.SO CHANGE~ MAPPED -Mrs. Lewis Mertz (lelt) and Mrs. William O'Brien re- view past accomplishments of the Christian Women's 1Club ,of Newport Beach as they examine missionary maps prior to a buffet lunCheon at noon Tuesday, May 5. ,~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Robert Burge, s p e c i a I features; Royal Grubb and Willis Smidder, music; Francis Williams and K e n n e t h Brouwer, telephone ; William 'Clancy and Willia"'-Beck, hostess; Robert Yoder and John Cain, deccratJons;. Dari Agullan, treasurer; G 1 e n n SOUTH COAST' .PLAZA Bristol StrHt Entrance lttwet11 J. Me111h1 tnd U.S. Ntt'I l111lr B'nai B'rith Women Install~ Set Program New officers w ill be in- stalled and the meeting pro- gram announced when mem- bers of Orange Coast B'nai B'rith Women, Chapter 1230, gather at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 2, in Rembrandt's res- taurant,· Costa Mesa. Cocktails will be served at 6:30 p.m. followed by a 7:30 dinner and iJtstallation. of the area ~d the film, cur- rently being viewed in the public schools, is indicative of the "now" scene. A discusslo11 of human rela· lions problems and methods for coping with t h e m realistically will be discussed. AddiUonal informatioR may be obtained by calling Mrs. Alan Steinberg, pr o gr a m chairman, at 962-5268. Embl em Club A film "Uptight, Black and White" will be shoWn and discussed by Ames Cauley, ci- ty commissioner o f humaJJ relations in San Bernardino, wheR the chapter meets at 8 p.m. Thursday, May 7, in • the 8'curity National Bank Gathering for b u s I n e s s sessions and prograins are members of Newport Harbor Emblem Club every secmd , Tuesday at 8'p.m. in the Elks Lodge, Newport Beach . • Costa Mesa. ~ Cauley has worked closely ~ with the blacks and Chicanos . -r=======""="=====;I "' ' '· ' ' . ' • fa sh ions for ••. t ('. \ ., ; Fashion l1l1nd, Newport S..ch Stonewood Ce nter, Downey \ \ VANITY FAIR'S DREAMY LONG ROBE This rs elegance in depth. Nylon tricot in captivati ng torchlight or twinkle blue. iThe perfect "toke along" when traveling· or for Casual [" at-home hours. Long. $.M.t, $20 Short. ~\ I ! ._..__...I_-<'\ \'J $12 ' . MOTHER'S DAY, SUNDAY, MAY 111111 .,.. ........... 'tfl ' , .•. ; ....., ... ,.....,. 'tfl t :31 , ... . CHAI.GI YOUl ,Ul.CHAlll AT PAIHIOtill ,Ott U. ,IMMI . ' WI ACCl,T AHY MAIOlt ClllDIT 'U.110 • Costa rMnl 546-2066 I SANTAANA f ., Wearecloslngour store onNorthMaln St.reef and have made drastic reductlons to se ll out our entire fashion 1 .... . . ~ . . . . ventory to the walls. All sales will be made on a f lrst •coma, fl fst •Hrved basis. All s alee final, no refund• or exchange•. Sorry, no mall, phone '!l ·c.o.o, Use your Haggarty'• Cha rge, lank~rlcard, Master Charge, ca•h or check. . ' . •• NOTICE to Haggarty's FU·R Customers Jecaua we made extra ... .,._, store-wide aclvan~• fall purchases prior to the d*ision to close the Santa A!la store, we are now jn a vastly overiiocked position. So, we have decided that our entire Santa Ana F!fr Salon inventory- Including these odvanced fall cletivM-will be said at drcntic Ndvdio111I Every kind of fine fur imoglnoblo! c~il lerms moy be arronged, ., ' THIS STORE CLOSING SALE ONLY AT HAGGARTY'S-SANTA ANA 40 FASHION SQUARE ' ' ----------• I l ' I I I • I I JI D~Y PILOT Th11rsday, April 30, 1970 < Mrs. Reagan Welcorried Calllornll Federacton o I Women'• Clubl hu aeltcled the SherttGo-Unlv.nal Hot<! GOP Tatk On Ballot Three speakers will dilCUU propositions on the June ballot for members of the Lacuna Niguel Republican Woman's Club, Federated, on 'ihurtday, May 7, in the Monarth Bay Beach Club. I I Nears Jo Unlveraal City for the site ol Jta f7th annual convention Monday, M1y I, through Thund1y, May 7. The confab will be called to order at .7:30 p.m. in the grand ballroom, follow ing a procession of executive board and Junior membership state officers. Tuesday morning t h e nominating committee will present a slate of candidates for offices, and Judge Bruce Sumner wW address the 818embly . presented. Mrs. • J a m e a McCalla, pruident of Orange Distrjci will host a reception. 'lbursday morning delegates and _ gueits will honor Mrs. Earle A. Brown, presid~t~ elect ol the General Fedeca- Uon of Women's Clubs. IAICO EASY-CARE · 'l/4i/or~6 "JUST FOR · YOU" ..-~---- Smart f11hion1, e•r•-fr•• fabrics faa- turi"9 BARCO end ether femous brtnd names. Ml••..,... .. -...... •• 98 S...aatowu • Cathy's Uniforms 1767 Nawpan llvd •. c.m. M... · 646·5Jll = 4DAY SALE! . '~u<!t!e .Brµce Sul)Ultt of ~ Orani• Cduilty Superiol' Coill't will apeai on propositions 2 throu(lb , S: i[lavld llilchco$, <>raqe Coiinty budget dlroc:· tor, WUi C&cUss 1, 7 and •· ~ .~ ...... taUve lropi the League of 'Women VcMrs will review ~Uon R. .. The ·1~ ' .,.~.. will ~ (;eoi-ge PUtnain, new! rep;orte~ and C&lifornia11 First Lady )\!rs, Rotla\d Rea(an. 1-. ~ 'veMlg will feature a ~~ -J~or_ ~be(ship THURSDAY FRIDAY , S~TURDAY Destination Bahamas Mrs.'Mara (Richard) Culp ol Newport Beach (!ell ) and Mrs. Margaret (Rich- ard) Callaway will be co'mpeting in the 1970 An gel Derby, an all-woman inter- national air race taking off from Toronto, Canada, Monday, May 4, and con- cluding in Nassau on Wednesday, May 6. Contestants will compete for $5,000 prize money in addition to trophies and otlier prizes. , Day -Sc;:ored , .. . ' CM · pqst Forms . For Spor.ts Demonstrations by t h e bthem California Olympic New Junior Unit • 11iM!.metUnJi wtu be(ln with ,:a t a.m. co«,e, fort~ hYi the t : 30 program callO!! to order by Mn.' Fred 'llrtai, president. -; ~ ,.. ' .. · Follerton ·cO.ds • • S.h~. Fqsh ~c:i ns • . The stcn ~ the -· • las!UOJi show"featurtnJt a cow plete wardrobe for today's col- lege student will be presented by Beta Psi Omega !IOC!al 90f'Orlty at California State College at Fullerton. The' showing will be staged Swlday, 1'-1ay 3, at 2 p.m. in the College Commons. Proceeds are earmarked for Camp Titan, a summer camp in the San Bernardino Moun- tains. Tickets are 50 cents and may be purchased at · the sorority house. Election of officers will take p,lace ·w~~ay mar n Jn g with reJolutioris and ~br,law changes acted upon •. ~Mrs. Ell~ ,Stent, HarrlJ, Los Angeles Times Woman-of-the- year will s~ak. A ~et ' will follow ·~at 1ev~n1 Jnd Wprl~ Campus All<iit scholarships will 'be .. : LET'S BE '.f.RIENDL Y lt you have new neighbors or k now of anyone moving to our area, pleue> tell ua ao that we may extend a friendly welcome and help them to become acquainted in their new surroundings. So. Coast Visitor 1 4~.n 494-9361 I Harbor Visitor COSTA MESA GOLF & COUNTJY CLUB ALL FACILITIES Ol'EN TO l'UBUC Gymnastic Team and David The Auxiliary to' Coastline Afterwards, Mrs. Vernon German's Tai Karate group 'Post 3536, Veterans of Fore ign fda'.thews, president, spoke 'to, will· be featured dtl'lng the . Wars i_s pu~ing ·lln extra the girls on the ne~ ·umt, "" AppHr1191 1ourill aqnual Sports Day at emphasis · on· Jhe youth of projects and duUea ol of&erl. . I/IC GARCIA LTD. --·-~b School . Cl Orange County. IJ\Jring the (alliering !IOllllPa-Vocals By GlR~INE w~ in aremont. Plans have been made for lions were taken and · glr1s INTDTAINlillNT e DANCIN• ----9"'! poasored by the Women the, fonnatipp of a Junior elected. ....,, frl,. s.t. t.,. .. 1 :JI ..... , kilodates of the prep school, Cl'rls' Unit.\· Au :ii I i a r y tnStallatk>n Will take place -,j the Sunday, May 3, event will members arid young women tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in the Now SerDI« omner beA ibeneHt for the infirmary gathered in the Cotta ·M~a. • Americin J.qion Hall, Colt.a ' .. t :JI , ... -n.,a, M .. s.r. , projeCt lau11ched. with the first home of the ·Wllllam Wwes Meta, with Mrs. Mathen in-Phofl• *-not 3PQl'l$, day four year1, ago. for. a get-aCQya.inted lunch. sta!J,ing. H.,,, .. ~ httY" Hffr, M.W.,""" frlllef, 4 t•' -,.rdin JI a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Girls between the ages ot:I~~~ a vatjety of booths and games 5 and 13 rears are eligible. 1llo wlll oner entertainment For further lnformaUon on for guests, incl uding an egg 1 eligiQJ.llty Mrs. Weare .will throw, greased pig cootest, Th · T · answer questions at &f6...3587, bingo parlor and s t u d I 'o e; : 1 · ee Earlier in the month during makeup booth . open ho((se at dollege Parli: Assisting wilh preparations School presentation of a new are tbe A1mes. T. \Villia1n Taf-t/er America n flag was made to Witalis and Harvey Somers. Hoben Brunz~ principal. Balboa; Peter Kierman, J{oss Recently an essay contest JI'. Bart.Jett and Douglas -~ f · th d • WU:!On, Corona del !>tar; or six gra ers too .. place Lenw L. Carver Jr .. Newport 1EdUor'1 Not?: A c0111m11 at wome11'1 and winners were selected by ·-.1 tC111 '°" sc:0tn w1u 1ppe1r Mell a -ial comnu'ttee Among Beach, and James K. Turner. w9f4o In "'~ DAILY PILOT. To"""" ~t"'"' • • ...... a Beach. Ko••• tor tt.e """"· ple1u ""11 wln,ners were Julie Manlove, -a""' tlli'm to P. o. Bo• 1560• TM' m1111 first place wi'nner of a H• Soroptimists Newport Harbor Soroptimist Club meets the first three Wednesdays for a lunchoon in the Prime Rib Inn, Costa ){es.1. The last \VeOnesday of the tnonlh members meet in .variOus locations for dinner at ?:30'p.m. Ll1'I Fllll ' n: .... W r9(Cellltc! Int MON'l,.I •"" LAGUNA IEACW savings bond,. New p 0 rt cLua CH4MPIONSHJI'-c~m-Elementary School: Brandy pk>t\shlp Fll11ht. Ille Mmet.. Johll Poor. V 0 '": L90N•d or.un11S, 2So1: 1d11 M•v eder, $1 . Bay View School, Sdlom11k11•. :m, -net: Pr"kMn' and Albert Nelwan, $ 5, Fltvllt. ttle Mmn. Art Grlllln, Jfl. Pomona•~--!. low 11roi1; Gler>n McMullen. C0ur1M' oJIUJUU Y111ar, 201, k;w net. ~=======;:;II lilt.YIN• COAST "''~ • MIOAL l'UY-c1&51 "· Mr1.. E•lc• Make a Sharp Gu11!11r, 791 Mn. M1r·ct1!1 Ken ... 101 c111s 8, Mr1. James 8, T•Ylo•, Trade·, Use n1 Mr1. H, J. Sw11r11<111, U; C!111 C. lht Mm es. Bruce E1!11v, Newell "'''· IO; e . H. s11.1nner. ta: c1111 Dime-A-Lines D, Mr$. W11r~n Gibbons, 771 Mu . Sam K11,111, BO. ., • your clolhes don't fit ••• You're self conscious, shy, embarrassed, frus1rated. • . . •,cilllha1111ch111M"•··· , Slimmin~ Women is ... r-. here to CHEER YOU UP and SLIM YOU DOWN and in time for SUMMER f.1-VALUABLE COUPON--. '1" An lnflitationFor You I "' AndAFRJEND... I I· 'FREE TREATMENT I I 1.., I , .. •UNofW.W ___ "' I . 1 .~. . I I • ,,.. .. ....,....°"""'"""" I fllA.TCJ1UNG THil JVORJD FAMOUS I Wi .. 1'1111C.1f11 A!Kel11ely lac.t I il'l'A.VE'E'l:•SYSO:MIU<Lii..,Jfor I trOWltiotfH. '. I ••--'-...,.1 •illi--.. MUSTBEUSEDWJTHIN7DAYS _ I _,.,,_._v, '" ............ ...... filA""'!""""'~Ml~N~.~W~lli!'"""-.!!(J!'!!"!N"""'-tA FIGURE AND ~ IUM p FACIAL SALON .w; ... fi\i\WP;M:;Slol.....,.litO'A;M-1t""P&. NOWOPIN llACllAIU ,.., •• ,. ...... c.m ..... 642-6513 ' ' TUSTIN SALON 5411111 Pint·-' ltrwl• S.-Ore • UMatl ... .. -.Ml\... • ' . " Beautiful Gifts For The Mother I Love SHE'LL LOOK LOVELY In A Pest•/ Colored L•cy Neglil)tt by , Odette Bersa . NEGLIGEE . LONG •.• $21 SHORT ••• $13 MATCHING GOWNS L-ON6 ••• $26 -SHORT ••• $1' Veta's mt•An APIAllL ............... ----- PHONE 642·11'7 . ' • \ . -, , SUNDAY · MOT:HER~S DAY , "~ ., , 1 f I ' . -. . SPE(IA\ V'~LUES 'ROM OUR ELEGANT WIG DEPT . 00 YOU HAVE A GRANTS CREDIT ACCOUNT? Ask any salesperson. SYNTHETIC STRETCH WIGS ' . . ~~~ S6~:~ GET WITH THE •CtJRtr • LOOK. READY TO WEAi . , SAVE Take up to 2 years to pay, depending on your balance. I 00°/o KANEKALON~ NOW ONLY - WIGS s996 SAVE HAY! A WARDROBE OF WIGS - 45 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM LONG & MINI FALLS WITH HEAD BAND ' NOW ONLY SJ96_ REGULAR $14.99 VALUE 100% KANEKALON ® LONG and MINI FALLS RMRSIBU ind VERSATILE $19.99 VALUE '1296 HOURS: 10 am to 9 fN't Mon. thN fri.-10 to 6 Pflll Saturdayt--11 to 5 P"' SUtldOJ" i ,Jit1 KNOWN FOR VALUES GRANT PLAZA e IROOK.t.UIRST & ADAMS 'HUNTINGTON ltACH • • • • • ' ' . • . . • .. -. . • I '· I t l t ' .. • ' 1hlll'~1. Aptll JO, 1970 DAIL V PILOT J 7 Compuw~.Krushchev l(ills Bo·redom With B~ush, C~nv:as Replaces . ' . 'Old Salt' ?l-10SCOW (UPI) -Forml!t dropped from power le> a life time in their comlortftble, Alexei N. Kosygin and Nikolai ordcrOO Uie exhlblllon closed. reor1anlll!ll the party and stays there. The _apartment. P r e m I e r N I k i t a S . or impotent silence. Ile quletly secluded. suburban govern· Podgomy have the same FAR DIFFERENT 11ovemment structures and ts used mostJy by ~ granlf.. Khrushchev, in the sixth year cele brated his 76th birthday mcnt villa. aversion tG nonrealistlc art. played havoc with agriculture daughter Elena, whom tit or ti.is involuntary retirement. April 18 with his children and Unli'ke E'••nhower and L·l.-.ni.~-.. ""'nlri'bul•" a And now, according to which made his enemies ac· adopted in childhood and has taken up a new hobby grandchildren. ....... niu u~l\;•n:• .... ~ persons who have Ii e en cu.&e him of "voluntarism" brought up as• daughter. _ n<>inting. 5. h' h Church.iU, Kbrushchev has no new page lo the history of Khrushchev's work , It Is far and "hare·bralned schemes." Los ANGELES (AP) _ If "" ince is 0 v er t r 0 w • talent for drawing or painting modern art when, In 1962, he RELATIVE D'E~tOTEO Following exarnples or his K hr us h ch e" hos lri'ed from a model of ''socialist Todav it Is pa inting , tomor· The only -1a11·,,, lo ha"e the SS · Hawaiian Enterprise • and his ·WGrks probably never was taken to see a show of / '" • • is any indication. the seafaring onelime opposite numbers, Lhe photography, hydropGnics will be exhibitOO, according abstract art 'at the Manege realis~' ':1 f'So o_fl~ci~ly row it may be 90mething else been demoted and discredited man or the future will be late U.S. President Dwight D. <raising vegetables on water) to those who ha ve seen 'his Exhibition Hall opposite the accept SC o vie ar · but one thing It will not be, is son-Jn.Jaw Alexei Adzhubei, 8 young electronics wizard Eisenhower and British Prime and training a jackdaw to talk. efforts. Kr einUn. Khrushchev alone can ex· accgrding to friends of his former l'dltor of Izvestia, the Mini.st.er Winston S. Churchill, plain what he i!J trying lO ramUy .:-the writing or government news paper. Ad- .rather than an old salt. Khrushchev bas found a new ENJOY EXHIBJTS All he does Is cover his His fury knew no bounds ex;press· with his brush but memoirs. zhubei now ha s a relatively The computer ls replacing way of whiling away his toog Khrushchev and his wUe, canvases with blobs of color, and b\denounced paintera and he will never get a public "I am not and do not inleod modest job as features editor Barnacle BUI. hours ol boredom. Nina Petrovna, immensely en.. producing, ironically enoue;h. sculpt.ors u "pedera~." and opportunity to do so. writing 111emolrs," Khrushchev for the illustrated monthly The Hawaiian Enterprise, For Khrushchev. still in joy the classical, academic tbe kind of abstractionism he uparasit.es." In his hobbies Khrushchev told newsmen two yeara ago. magazine "The Soviet Union."· called the first ' 'high 1 y good health, painting is the schools ot patoli.ng and they indignantly outlawed in thiJ "If you put a donkey's tall has displayed lbe. same im· Although he has a Uve-room Ktu-ushchev Is one of the automated" freighter , is 720 fourth hobby since the miss hardly an exhibition in country, in a. Pall of paint he could patience he had when he was apartment in central Moscow four living premiers who have feet Joria;, displaces 34,700 tons dramatic day ot Oct. JS, 1964, Moscow. His successors, the ruling do better than thil SCH:alled the supreme ruler ot lhe nu\ door to the Canadian ~n removed from of~ice in ::ind can c!o 23 knots -but when he was Wlexpectedly But they spend most of their troika ol Leonid I. Brezhnev, art," Khrushchev said. He Sovie\ Union. He kept on Emba-.y, ht almost never disgrace. in a pinch could be run by,--------'---'-----'--'--,----'------------'------------,-------'-----'----------------- three men, th!! owners say. Jls .cargo is containerized. ?o.1ajor control systems are computerized. Dirty work is all but eliminated . The pilot on the bridge has complete control of the engines. The Matson ship. operating between Hawaii and the West Coast, has a crew of 43. Matson says 16 would be plen- ty . While it Wfl:S under con- struction last December, it caused a tie-up as ·members or lhc marine firemen's and water tender"s union refused to sign on Matson ancl American President L i n e ships. American also plans such automaled vessels. . -J\1 0RATORIU~1 HELD The matter was settled afler ,. few weeks, with ;..greement nn a year-long moratorium . The companies said they v.·ould man the ships with the usual number of crewmen . The unions say automation means unemployment. Matso n says lhe Hawaiian Enterprise, I a u n c h e d in J\1arch, is the consolidation of a lot of modernizations or re- cent years rather than any breakthrough. · ll was the culmination of a $20 million development program. Its unique features are a centralized control r o o m , which looks like a laborato ry and is manned by two men, and a control system on the bridge which gives the pilot total control. The control room's main fcalurc is a solid slo:ite elec· tronics panel which monitors boilers. tanks. burners and other equipment. I! somelhing goes wrong, a light and buzzer come on. Most troubles arc corrected automatically, or by manipulating the panel, \YORK REDUCED On other ships, engineers .. have to make the rounds f!Very two or (our hours check· Ing gauges. An engineer would have to change boiler burners a couple of limes a day. The electronic c o n t r o 1 s make possible perfect com. bustion. The two engineers sit in a i r cOnditiohed, solnd· proofed comfort. Only rarely does anyortt? v i s i t the hot. noisy engine and boiler room s. Changes in throttle are log. i::ed automatically instead or by hand. A computerized typewriter records e n gin e revolutions per mintue. Up on the bridge , the officer In charge has no old fashioned engine roon1 telegraph to 11igna1 the speed ... ahead" and "revcr~e." J~e has the same speed dial as the control room, ;:ind simpl y slips it to the desired forward or backward speed. The engine responds automatically. QUICK DOCKING This permits quicker dock· Jng: and undocking. There 's an automatic ex· changer telephone system for All living and working space.~, wind direction and speed in- rlication systems: 28--channel ship·to-shore radio: ship clock automaticall y kept on Greenwich time : a sonar systen1 w h i ch corn;tan11 y displays the distance between the hull anrl ocean bottom. The craft is the first to carry different sizes of cargo containers. There arc three m;::iin types . -regu lar. for dry goods: a refrigerator uni\ for fresh fru il. aod tank lyJ>(' units for liquids. \Vhen ii is docked al special terminals. it can unload in 32 hours. Most ships take da ys or weeks. The containers arc slacked t";iX deep in holds. four deep on deck. A fe1v have h11len off in storms. But the fault Is attributed to failure of a man lO secure them properly Matson says such !ihips, ' 'l\•hich v.·lth their high speed cut two days off the Ha"·aitan run, could make America competitive In shipping again. U.S. shippers long have complai~d that foreign shl~ pers bullcl hulls for less, .pay )es.s, and t h u s can carry r~11M for le&S:-' U.S. shlp1. Which carried 45 percent of GROUND BEEF :il7'.~ ... 55~. EXTRA LEAN GROUND ~~'11 88< ,BEEF ROUND QUALITY t111 •• :"'" 1..1. FRYERsi:~r.~=-··-·· 33f .. HAMS ,~'""'" 69< IUlf,OtTIOtl-.. ---ti. CROSS RIB,.,umoom 88< IK~fN*llDlllf ll. ·WlflQ.' ~DS . ·_, GERBER'S BABY FOOD !tz.~1:.1,~1 ... 9• BABY FOOD ~~~:~~:.1~.~~~ ................ 12· APPLESAUCE :::;~c:u,•:~ ••.......... 35< FRUIT COCKTAIL :':::':i:''. ......... 23' HUNT'S PEACHES ~':: ................ 28' DEL MONTE PEARS ... u .......... 45' APPLE JUICE ~::~~:~~ ................. 29• GRAPE DRINK ~~~~:~ .................. 36( NIBLETS CORN r:.~·-~1t ................ 22• HUNT'S TOMATOES , ............... 32' VE GET ABLE JUICE :!!~~~~:~.~ ........ 33< LIBBY BEEF STEW, ..... m ............ 68 ' ,~, , ... ~&r!·--. ! PANCAKE MIX AUNT JEMIMA 5 2( ·coMPlETf J2.01. aox CARNATION TUNA ;.':,~~~~· ..... _.'..36' OLIVE OIL:c:r~·.~ .... --.. -·············47c ITALIAN ORESSING~:."::L .......... 36' STEAK SAUCE ~-;'i;:r.~1~~~.~~1. lQ< PEANUT BUTTER:~:;~u• ............. 87c KERN'S PRESERVE~1°,~:1.~~~~.1.'SO< KERN'S PRESERVES~~:~::~.~ ...... sac SOllP llll'tUlOllMllllllOOMOt 15c 'II (lll(llll ltOOIH.f ''"·''· u.11 ............ . CUCUMBER STICKS~!:~.i::.~~~-~.'.~~46< OLIVES ~~~~;i~~~~.~~.~'. .................. 39' r FOLGER'S ~:';:~<•• ........ 83' FOLGER'S ~:'.Tu11 ........ •1 •1 FOLGER1s:::.'c•1 ........ 1~ FOLGER'$"'""" (Ol'HI 99' ...1..111 ......... . ... ~&r~-.... SPAGHITTI (Ml' IOY"-11.D(( W(MIAJ IAllS 4G-OL CAN 73c MEAT PIES ~'i.0:~~~.;~~~~~~ ............ 19' BREAD DOUG, H'"m••"'1m ... 1 66" , .. , •. ,1$ ............... . PEPPERED STEAKS '"""'··-· 73' 4 COllflT rt.Cl.Ml, 1JOMCI rAClAll YOU ·coULD BE PAYING , ·143· MORE FOR YOUR STANDING RIB ROAST ' . ' . ' . ,. . . . Prices ore Oi1cou11ted E.>.cepl on Foir·Traded ond Goverr'tment Cantrolled Items. '. • QU A}ITY BONOEO I' , lUCKY IONDlO lllf '' HONESTLY DISCOUNT LABELED PRICED FRESH FRYERS WHOll IODY CHICKllS U.S.D.A. G•ADI A T-BONE . STEAK 59~. 48~. TAILS REMOVED lUCKY $ BONDID 137 STANDING RIB ROAST .... ~'..~.·.~~~.85~ RIB ROAST 93c,,. lUCll IOND£D lllF ' fl&•• l/Mll 1111-llKn ...... 1111 BEEF ll. ROUND STEAK _ ......... ~ ..... '.'~'.~.'.'.~'. .. 88~. · r,~~~~ .. ~.!?.~~!E.~~ $1~.1 lUCIY IOlfDID lllf ' ·~Rr!--. GRAPEFRUIT JUICE TlllSWllT 42 ( l'INIC 46-0l. CAN . ·1JIOZll~ j HAL I 8 UT ~t•:;:'::~~. '.~~~~·l·'-~~1 ............... ' 1 '1 HADDOCK~i·:~.'::t~.'.~~·l·'-~'. ............ 96' MINUTE MAID JUICE:';;W ...... 26' COfffE RINGS ~~·,~~~'······· ........... 65 ' fflUllllfl. IUl'IUl1. Mll'l.I CIUIH:Ml VEG ET ABLES ~~::: ~~; :~~r!~l~~r~.33 c (Olll. SlKIO 'tUM llllQ. Ml-PllS. t (It.•••• ORE·IDA POTATOES :::"L'::'.'. .... 35' ORANGE JUICE ~~';',~~~ ..... --35' ... ~&rt--. PURR CAT FOOD MINI llTS CMICll'lN & ICIONIY 61/J·OZ. CAN 1oc t ~ ... P.AC_KAi(D~lOJ!L...: ~ TENDERLEAF TEA ::~t1~:;.~ .......... S 1' CAMAY SOAPl:.~'.. .................... 16' COMET CLEANSER """'"" ........ 26' CASCADE DmRGENT :';rl:1.~.40' GAIN DmRGENt .... L"'"· .. ·-·-·'l" TIDE DETERGENT ... oLM<.-......... 82' ... ~&rt--. BLACK PEPPER lUCKY GtOU'HD &.Ol. (AN 33c , .~ -~DllllllGliC'll.!"'. LADY LEE BUTTER :!.'.~:f;.~ ..... ~" 79c ROD'S DRESSING :'::i~~::~.'.~ ........ 37c LADY LEE TOPPING:~:.~~~::: ... _ 43c SOUR CREAM ~!~'i~~\~~~~~~ ......... 29• ~· ..... ~&r!--.. HARVEST DAY PEAS 16.oL "" 14c .BEVERAGE Ol YMPIA BEER •il'Lt••r.<•11 ................. .. KAL KAN DOG FOODf:~o'::::~.".'23' CALO DOG FOOD u•·•L u• .......... 17' HI CLASS DOG FOOD ,u• ........ '2" PRIME DOG FOOD u ................. 'I" ... 4&rr--... GOLDEN CORN Oft MONTI 2 0 ( 11.or. CAN ... tkt few items Ji1t1d 01 tkis pil&t con· stit-te j1st ii small s111pli1f 1f 1~1usaRds el ltw, disco•Rt ,ricu i1 sta rt for JIU at Locky. LINK SAUSAGE GKAI MIU 1-ll.tq.-•·•--•••-•••••-••• SWIFT SAUSAGE •• , •• I. nm .. OL ,.,_ !Ml •Allllffll LUCKY BACON Slkfl f .ll, , .............................. .. WILSON BACON 01 IWlll U.K!D I-I.I. ~IG, ..••• , •• __ ...... _, SLICED BACON IAIMll 10llll Ol Ullt. 111. , .............. - 39c l 69c l 67c l 77c 75c PARSLEY FLAKES :<.:;~~:! .............. 43' ,,. · ., "· LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES 8 BEAUTY Al8S GRAVY QUIK~=~~~~.'.~.~~~~~~'.'.~~ .... 16' DRESS I NG ~:~i~':~'~'.~ .~~~.~~.~~~~ ..... 49' RITZ CRACKERsr:l1:.<:01,.H•••-·····3ac FIG BARS ~~~,1~1::, ........................... 42' BREAD~:.:~~~:::.1.~.~~~~.~.~'.~.~ ....... 31 c BREAD ~tl~~:,·.~~:.~.·~~~.~~·-~~ ...... ,. 25' NABlsrn COOKIES~:!~'.'.~1-~~ ...... 45' (v'•iliuA. AJf~ ,llDGI, UIOC:OU II fUOGfJ , Ttu..~ ,. _l!OWI .~~. MODESS NAPKINS ::~:~i:" .......... 77' tlltltAt, 511,11. fll fOlflll KLEENEX NAPKINS ~~l\ox .......... 27' LUCKY TISSUES ::!'t!.m .............. 22' · WHIT£ KING ''D''!:.~1:.',':: •••••••••••• 68' WHITE KING SOAP., ............... 69' WATER SOFTENER ~.'.';~:'.': ........... 57' Our LOW Eve~Pricc! CIGARITTES IUNG S!Zl 10 l'K. CTN. $3~.t U.S. D. A. FOOD ITIMI' COUPONS Gladly Accepted LOW DISCOUNT Pl/CU CHIQUITA BRAND BANANAS CINTRAL AMIRICA'S GOLDEN RIP! 12~. U.S. NO. 1 GRAD! RUSSET POTATOES 10 'i!~ 54c KITCHEN UTENSILS TEARDROP PATIO CANDLE "''" ,, •n"'auc 1i1M1•1 '•r ""' 48c J•h•. H1r,s '''' ~111 ••• 11111 "''· PLASTIC BOWL SET l'''lttt "nil• 1nlin1 '1wl1 i• l 11t11 "'' Mii' 11 11•1 11• Nlllf .... Hrfq S(ft,I. KITCHEN SINK SET Dht uct, 1ilwn111 ''' 111 luitl $) 68 1111 11 ••nr 11tr ,11rtic tNt .... , &ill If flll FDS DEODORANT S1h 1111ll1ctln '"''Ill IHNr1•t $)03 ltr lk llt!J lt111!lltl .. MM. J OUJKI Sil( 11(\UDIS 1S• orr JERGENS HAND LOTION 14\ii OUNCE IOTTLI r11ou.1.1 le11ic1ltlJ .te:..,11111 kr· $ J 26 m 111 •r 111111 ,Jtt•t•r letkiq; •••• ,. . DRYAD DEODORA~ -4-0UlltCl CAN CINIH ••1111r II' lllU·hls,1t11t .., ••• llllttlwt Jtt.1nu1, •/t11u11,,..rtel1~1. mlll.l• 54< . ""· 66< P(ISPlliNT MEDl-QUIK FIRST AID SPRAY &1ti1t•lit '-"' ltr 111i•tr eris •" -Wtll. llttls fl ll IHtliitS. $) 18 J.OUNCl Siii l lnt.mlaUonal trlde • r t e r World War If, now have but Shop Any. Doy ••• ~ave Every ·Doy ... with Lucky low Discount Pricing Policy. S ptrce.nt _ · Forel.gn lines have been slow tn eutomate and U5t con- tainerized cargo. ~ B"y The DAILY PILOT : I Just for 'Peanut,' • ---• • • • • -------=-~---~·---------!.. --------------~----------------~-~~""'~~~~'---•;u ------"".""""--~..-,~-:-------·--------------------------------~--,. . ----~~-- ',April .J/70 A teu• .. _.. a~ lqr,"tl$'Uf ~9'1~· ; ••. of savings <11 over 50"/,f llwslt~1 . beoutlf\11 .Spcinisli consoles no"' To!S of StOIOQ• spoce :behind 2 cacie/l. Cfoors. )'our cholce of pecan; or. green ••• if. y,pu hurryl . , ,,, • · ·,$s·a· .. -. UST· f29lf~ ! ....... I. . "' ,J -. . ...,, ........ 6eautiful Sponisli sofa with a distincti>e diamond !J11~9 • seat ... and loose pillo:. bookl'.Si!Ve . Y2 .noWI It is .tail ored in leather li~e vinyl with exP,Osed oak triml This '1'111 se!Hastl . · · '1s·o~-usij°99;~S- 1 .: .. • . . ..... , ! .. .; The •••rt ..,.,,., will tole ho'!I•· t~i• ricK, w,~li:l\11 l\os$ett ,tri~lf , , iJ,esser, . .with , Micaito~.lap, ,lrq/l!Od . plate :11fa'\\. inil;ro,, and lull or. queen . size heodOoa[d ot the b iggest SQv-. . . . ings .eY'=rl , '". ·-·· s127 · t'T ~5F:95 .. 1.' • ' 01.t,' \io hli tilieut thl1 Y•I• uel Spanish occasional tables in dmk -~CJI: .l'nh!Jn >•<; by rich«orx·, ., ing ~th slo~tops.. l'i'k from cocktail. or end styles w.hile the savings ore • .-I " " -• the 9f4ol••!l .,-.,, . . . .... . $38 . UST"lil;~f-.· .. -".. . '·'t. " ~ ' ~ : . : AA -111 the "-lei Famous · Kroehler quality ••. Striking Mediter- ranean styling •.•• greot, ~ig soving.sl·. - This.· Mediterranean sofa hos deeQ, reversible, foam seat cushions and is Scotchgard protected! See it nowJ . Sav'e more than .V2 I ' I ' l --.. $146 UST 9, _¥i ~ : . · , · 1 HllY• • h•nl II•-,? Toke home thi s.Jamous Kroehler~,r~line~ .. at _ q, .. ,.. low s&le,pdcetJ Sit.down, rec!ine, ~e£!J the ten.sJo,ns melt owayl. ,It is toiloro~. • in vinv1 jn a. chqtce QI Colors! Hurry·, . fo, thiil •· ·. . .. usT1 ·19.95i ~::·: , •. $68'"'' '!. ·, I· A ~.,.. ch•........t This handso we Col9riiol, li~in~ J,,Oom __ group i~cl~l ,r the solo one ch"a1r for on@1:1ow . . price} ~.vCiilo~fp •. i~ print Jobr~ql Th.e . sofo :an~ ~hOJ.r. _!lrive .rpve~si~~e se_O!, _. cushio'!s encl rnaple ~uck wings! -_· .'" 'r •'.-$166 UST'~64.9.S ..• : • . - ••••• ,, ................ o,. ' . I • ' ·ica • C04$1 10 CQ.111 . .. . ~ . ' Day b,y dqy, hour by hour ·we qre finding thousaods of items in.. ouf warehouse we didn't ; know we had! At this printing s2al,OOO worth of name brand merchandise has been un-\ covered ... or should we ·.$ay discovered in ;0vr warehouse ... and this is just the . beginning!! Crews are working "round the clock'' to make this the most exciting, value ·, AT .. LE·S pa the WC yo ' H~re's your chance of a lifetime room in your home at price up 1 How would you. like to buy a s149 BAR for 560 HER-E . IS A PARTIAL LISTING • • can~you ·imagine a We're "giving away'' a 5149 RE.CUNER for 572 ~199 DINETTE for 598 No - AMERICA'S MOST FAMO-US QUALITY BRANDS INCLUDE.D .. We'r~ Unloading • , • What a buy! · After-Inventory Closeouts . Give your home a npte -of·•legancel -:,~ .. RECORD SOFA & ·"~' s~~9 TA~LES for s48:, 529 CABINETS for s17 $499 LQVESEAl ;for $297 ~J-Z Bring your Car, Trailer, Pick Up, Station Wagon ... Take it with· you Or We'll deliver for a small charge ... 'Big Savings either way!. Jasy to Reach from Anywhere · • c:O..CSTTOCO. • b crafted in richly g?o'in9d wolnUtfYoG chodse "from' cocktOil . or ena tables •.• · eitlier for one low price whil9 " • th•v:.~fB:o.ile~f~whenthBdoO'is 10 ;?{LEVITZ w AREHOUSE AND Sl:IOWROOM, BEACH BLVD., ope '"'"' .. ' . . $38" ;_. , . • ~·-·r ~ LIST ~91/1 .. -.. . . . . -A A.A.. ..... 1 .... llelld .. 1 when you •1 T.J servo them onJliil drpmotic;.Spo,iish-,. fO :' dining .(oom headlined by on GC·. ~'4 togonol pedestal table with IW9 ~-2'.' · · 1 leaves plus 1 arm and 2 side chaiFs • with ,vi~yt up Ii o I st ere d seoll and bocksT . '·. -''296 UST4 ··'t·:-. . '. P.M. " Partial .Listingl .• ' l 1 -' OVER 300.0 PIECES FROM OUR FABULOUS SHOW-ROOM WILL BE CLO"SED iC ' ...... . . . . ' ~ , • , I I •. I • ...,,~~~~~-·-~---·-----------·-------------------__________ ..,,.... -------·-----·~,---~-.....----··--,,=-;-,..,.,_ I ,,,. . . ~ ~· ... l· ~ ~ .•. . ~-.. f •••• . ' :~:. .. ' . - ' • as · . • • "' £, ust ·. ... .. ' .·. ,. p packed sale you've ever experienced. Our doors open at 10 AM sharp and due to the nature of this sale it must be strictly first come ... first served!! We guarantee you ,. won't be disappointed! No matter where you live in Southern California we believe your tjme will be well spent when you come to Levitz. " THAN·. ne to own furniture for every ip to now thought impossible. fHERE ARE THOUSANDS MORE! ' Now's your chance to "grab" a 543 9 BEDROOM tor 5237 After-Inventory unlolding SIMMONS 5539 SLEEPER for 5250 : ... _________ _, ._ _________ ... Your Dining Room needs this s549 SUITE tor 5297 ) ... ST ARTS TODAY ... AT 10 A.M .... DON'T MISS OUT! • • •, ' . •• , r • . 1 " ~'.i ........... • After Inventory, sit pretty on this Swml · Absoruf 1 luxury is yours with this s299 SOFA for 5145 We're writing down this ·SPANISH .Sf('ICf 1!110 ~TZ lA S110CqA;:/' 9 . t, 569 CKAIR for 535 5149 BOOKWE for 575 \:J Hundreds and Hundreds More . . . The Biggest Furniture close-out In California's history ... Be early for the best selection ... Hurry! • • Edinger· Ave., Next to the Huntington Shopping Center EASY CREDIT TERMS AVAllABLE .A 10:·., A.M. to . o .· PM j ·l ~UT .. 'i HU~D.REDS · LESS T~AN HALF · PR!CE ... DO~R~. OPEN AT 19 AM f • • Aprl ·1910 ' ..:=:,::.:. •IClll•; • • ........ , .... ,._ : .. ~ ,,,.., Solw your •l?CIC9 piobletna : with one of"'-booUttful 7~· ' lingerie chealtl Alf drawera '" duot-' proofed ond dn smooth! ·Your:· choice of Colpniol mople, Sponbli · pecan !>' yml!f ond gold. •::I s4a ' UST 89.95 ...... ;.. · , A .... ••••r-erlThJsb 1811 ook Spanish bedroom suite Jn. eludes tile Mlcar10 topped triple dre-, tho fr<Jmod pla!e gloss M1"' · ror, king size M6dbo6rd and nlte stondt ;you ,must -thisl UST 329.95.... $197 . ' , . ) ... , • few of tliese cha;rllfflll ·! Colonlol sofas oto left! We'"' cleor-" Ing them out at tho bi~QMI tavings ' . ever. Eoch is cusiom quilted and ac· J canted by rich wood. Deep, revtr,. 1 Ible, loom le<ll cuihlons. . UST 299.95 .•• , $150 l -. awe. 111111; ...... will ~~· -1 up rofleshed after o n~hn rest on · one of tl\ese lobulous famous biOlid ' mattress ond box spring sots. We • how !win, full, queen ••. even king · size ~;,. some quilted ••. all degrees of flrmntJI) Be here early! -% J UST 109.95 ~onFF to 279.95 up to, • .,. ~ , ' ••'I f1111t over thil handlOme " Colonlof· dining room suite , .• be ,J here eorlyl It Is highlighted by on ' oval M!carta topped toblt with leof ' and cemes with 4 cOl!lfortoble """*s choJ(I .. UST 329.95 .• ,, $18 7 1 . . . . .... ... • ..... ..... This lianif. some Cofoniol sleep sofa tums any room Into a apart 6edrooml tt con· · ' verts to ci queen size btd, w11h a : loom mattrtul Quilted printed. UST319.95.~•• $167 J A -•••ii Mii this'' stunning ' Spanish sofa comes complete with ' 2 cha irs. All have contoured, detp tuked seats for top comfort plu1 ex- posed oak frames. Carelrei vinyl. Hurry! · '.. '276 I LIST 499.95 ••• , , hll .. lfwt ...... ,.at huge I tovingsl This modern Bouen suite In· eludes a Micorta topped table with 1 t~ree 1 Z' leaves plus rl arm and 3 . '. side chairs with comfor1ablo uphol· ' Sleredaeatsl LIST369.95 .... $197 1 llfewlo11 , •• ......, Ds>n't worry! This sola ond loveieot set Is Scotchgard protected to JouQh at spills and .stains I Both P,\eces helve. re- versible stot ond bclek cushions! · -· s233· UST 469.95 •••• ... • of tlU Bossen Fr*""h ~ov-) lnclol bedroom ot the lowest price everl Included Is the Ch.rry triple dresser, tho fra"19d mitror, a lull' or , queen size heodboord and a hand· some night stand. UST 3:;,95 .... $19 7 W..W .;.. •111" that this lllCISllve, hefty, dromotk: $pllnilli sola et>uld be prieed to low? h hos deep, revtrslblo, loom 1e9f . """'1ons and Is tallorod In vinyl w11h upoaod 6ok fromol ' .. ". •137 UST i 69.95:. ~. l Partial Listingl I ·\ \. • r I I \ __ ------------. ____ ._ --------------~.:...-~--~--"'-.c....:_~-'--''-------='• I' . -, -~ ..... , \ft DAILY PILOT lhUrsdaJ, Aprl\ 30, 1970 • ENSENADA, ENTRIES TOTAL 565. . . • • 'AME.ltlCA'a LAfllCS£&T PAMILV C'OTHtN9. CHAIN ·I =I • ) ~l ~I. ! ' t-C . ' ;;I_~ ' , .. .. j ' ., ) Avril· rayon . and cotton ~ THE DRESS WITH ·: . MANY ASSETS orily 99 lllSSES' SIZES 12 TO 20 -f'UTlllllNG ALWIROUND PLEATED SKIRT bo<..,i.atsl0<thesoltorsilboudtethat enha.nas )'OW' figure in a f eminioe manner FMlllONABLE . KTTIJl.OUALITY DETAIUNQ badc-Oudded vinyl belt with Credan-o:ml priot&ont-, butt-ted sboulden ;:-~_Cl.UR COLORS A ml-eob·linlineu in a alcnderizi.ol vatlcal·J"lhd 8oraJ print oo lresbwbile • • OPEN SUNOAYS II TO S • • COSTA MESA, 1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th ~RDEN GROVE, 1!3721 GARDEN GROVE ILVD. CUN~ City, lo\() Ar1•¥•rlt, U' s~ Art C11fr, i-ee~ MO Ml11lt1, U' Jloolt. Gfoflt INl!t.11, Cl'l•h-"'• PH Hll":*:oli' ''-· I:. YtMbll, llollll'lt Aflllrff, 1t' 1\ooO, ltk;l\'111 l. Df¥1&. LOJ All9t1U, MO Glorl•.c. lll' lloofl, Ktrl111 Gvll1!1e11. Irvine, .. H- l;11ttrllnt. 3" <Ull.,., Ollbsrl l'rlftCf, "ewl'Ol't 81.U., PH M!H PM!!, J2' ·~ 1ton1lcl Taclm•n. S111i. An1, ,.H Ough1 L U' 11!»P, Fr1iil V1r"'1m, LOflll 8t.ui, PH G11.r. •• u· ''°°"' Fr1rill; D1lr. ''" Prdro, PH K1lv11, 17' 11oo1. Joh11 Mvrlll'lv, Hu,.. llnt!QI\ llf6Ch, PH Qe11ci.1111, :u' 1loofl, Sh 1 Id on Stflrtlber. 8e111r1Y Hlll1, PH Ser Wiid!. 29' k-1(h, Sid"" H11dll, Stnlt ....... PH S.1>1.,..,btr S-, 21' ''°"' $, O. l1lcleme G1rden1, PH Sit••' 1111 30' alooll, L_.rd '•ltm"" L-8tKn, PH L•l•~r F•l••1 t6' ''°"'' lladneY kh•HI, NtwPOr 81tdl, MO M••l-ttt Ill, U' 11oo!), J-81r1!ow, ,,...,., MO Jorni, ff' tlooP, JoMph V, W1llll, Sin Pedro, PH ,.':,~~:~u~~·;t?'' •'-• S!u1rt W1rd, Reid'I' Eddv. w '""'"' (llll(k Edd'f. (OJl1 MQ1, PH -r Vl\111111 II, 21' 1loop, l1ncfl.u"' ' Adltln1, M1"'11ll1n 811C11, MO P1c1, 21' -11oOP, L, I!. Cr.Ml~. l1!1'11 hKtl PH Hutky, il' 11-, 1'"11111 H, Smltt., G1rd1n Grovt, PH p::::=~Q.~1' •klOI>, O!cll M•IO\I, Or111N BIG$_,,, tt' tlooP, Mldltel l(ln.MY, Holl)'wood, MO ' TU,.,OIM, )6' 110011, SIH!heft \'yt1, ost1 Mesi, Pli J-llllllO\I, .W tlooP. Ito I I I n MtBurMY. M1rln1 del ltt'f, OR Deb, 3l' 1loo11t J1r,.., 01vldt!lt, G1r<Ht11 0 11 EbO rlaf. U' ,.....,, Wll!lam Htll<.1111, OC...,..ldt, Oii lorff, '3' 11ooP, Miiin Col!dl, PKlllc 1"1llUd•1, Olt Br1vo II, ,JO' 11-. C1rt1r 11\d Alford, Cot-1191 Mir, OR lluefln1 ~· 11ooo. Fred P1lmltrl, M1rlN oel ltt'f, 011 Odin, 3?' slCIOll, Dol'llld Prl(1, Ccut1 Mnl, PH Teoult1, 29' sloop, C!ll Ek, M1rln1 0.1 11 ..... 011 Tller1, ~1' 1lao•, J1m11 O'Htrn, M1rln1 d1! ll1y, OR El P~rrlla, 66' 1loop, l ob Neile. Sin Oleta, Oii P1tr101, :U' 11oDP. W•r1111 T1rr1, EscOt!dldo, Oil Loltl, lO' slocH>, HtrJ!er, Ev1M, ~'rrtl119 •nd coruro; Rldondo 8coc11. v1111111t1 2t' 1\oofl, MCF1r11M, Mo,..1 1nd 1111. ~1t11t 81rbtr., MO Aelnc;aurt. JJ' 1loo1>. C II • r 1 t' N-<omb. S1t1 Oleta, OR Gone Wllh !ht Wind, lO' sloop, L1r1 H1nV111• ,,_ ... lfit d1t Rey, MO 81~ Normer. '3' ,1oop, Gordon tnlt ~111.,,n, llOlll1'1 H!lll, 011: Oorolh'f o IV. a 11ooP, Al•n <hbo•n, A11•he!m, PH Pele, 37' •loo1>. Jamn Emmi, Pl1~:::.~•,; ~~.. l1' alooP, (IP Wtsl, $-.,II Mof!ICI, 011: A""•"'· 1Y 1loop, Gr-.tm tr•d Gr1~. Cost• Mell. Oil --l"'ldt19 Olide. oil' 1'-> Geo•n Sc:hmldl, LOI. A1'1tlt" Cit S11noow11tr. 3.1' 11Dap, Joe M. Pruct. hn Pedro, PH Ntnlloa, 15' slooll, Jolin Colem1n, V1t1 N11~1. MO Vtllo, '1Y 1loop, J1ck l lttb, NtwPOrl &tld'I, Oil Vlun, 32' slooll, Mol'8111 (9, Rolll.,. NUIJ, Oil X11\..:111, "3' •looP, Fr•'* Arlt1, T1i~°"·o~'~i\ePHKlll, 111 tlooP, llob ' &tc:lam, Los Allffle•, Oil Vll«ro, lS' YIWI, And r I W 81rmllltl1n Ml. 811d'r, OR SUnbow !1._ U' 1looo, H.A. Curw..,, 1"111det11, 011 Golden Girl, Jt' 11(1op, G-D• Sta"r Jr.,, M1rln1 dt'I ll:tv. 011 l"rtl\lik, ,,. •lllOI!• Jlm Llnd1rm1n, 91~ IJltlld, 011: Sftow Gout, 3'' 11ooP, NtllOfl Olli, St!lll 8trblor1 PH Mkhtllt, ii' 11ooP, H. H. HuOl'llf, ... ~,.. 0 11 $ftrd1.11I, 4' 11oot1, H..,rv P-r, Sin•• MOll!ct , OR Slt«CO II, 15' .1oo11. Johl'I Corrough, Los Ar1111lel. PH Oullt TP!ltl, 1" tklll1>. Rldo1rd L Hay, Ptclfl( P1n .. ~ •• MO Fttmt, lY 11oo1>, Dick R1m"'' SOUllltllt, PH ,Otltllo, "1 1looli, Wllll•m IE. Wfllle, P111drna. 011 Aollhl1 11, J.I' 1looo, Jtl'Pln C. Hirt Jr., M1nlltfttn lltdl. PH L1 Mtr!P011. :16' 11oo1>, Rldl1rd IE'. J1t*-. LOI An•tlff PH PtHC1n, 3.1' 11ooP, Ptttr ParSOM, Rlvtr.IG .. PH E1trt1t1, '3' YI WI, Roti.rt L. MYtrt, IAI Al'llltle1, PH Glllt11,t .O' 1loop, Allin It, GlllMrt, CulYtr 1.lf,, PH Undlno, l2' Jioo., Ct~ld AUi'°"' Loi Alto., 011: -81run1, 1T YIWI, Jolwi Mdn!Yrt, Miint1rey P1t11. 011 Fl'ffdOl'PI, 4 ' cuner. J1ck Sllld l. c .... 1rll1D, PH Alflr, 4' 11ocH>, Ht rti.rt Wlldl'Pltn, Mtrlt11 del ltt'f, PH $o.L-,_ 11' 1ioo., Gt,.., Swet1»n. CllltlWOrm, M{J. A•lt l. 25' JIOI»>, C'O'fll tl'ld Tu,ner, Lon• 8tKh, Mo PrOY!del'IC-t, t5' JlooP, EPln Gould, L-llMcP!, MO. C>IOl'IVWI. u· •I-. Hl!'lk McGm, M1rl111 dtl Rn , PH \ltt1lkoro tl, 3" ttgop, &r11e• 0 1t111/tonl 11:..:11and1. PH 1(1! Nu, Jt' llooD, 11:.M, H...,llton. l t H1br1, l"H Ptn1ce•. ll' 11DoP. ltt Smith, Stt1l1 Ant, PH , P•t_tda Mtn•n•, Ml' ke!do. Po,t Ind Tr11ft, Ptlldtl'lt, PH Rotut , 2t' lloOP, Al JOlll'llOn, M1nll1tt1t1 l lKh.LMO PUPii~ , •• m. tr •loop, Ptltr Sd\oo ... ll'lakor, Lon• lllac!I. MO. Ml Cor•ion. ,.. 1Joop, Frtdclle l . Poore, Hollvwood, PH, Emil)'.._ -It ""'°"' Tim Sll11>1rd, lt Jc111, 0 11 . 0 1t1r1, "1 1looD, 11t1m1rt1 O. ll111tf, Huntlnewn 8e.-cll, PH. T11e Odd Couple, JJ' •k11111. Rontl<I M. LH. Wtsl Lot Angelfl, 0 11. l11Y LlnG1, ?6' 11000. G111•t• CtrewtNtc, Sin Pi!<:!rc. PH. $11u111. 2)' SJllOP, J1me1 E. Monrt. 9tfbot IJ! ... d, l'H. Stb,., 11' slooo, llor L. KltM. Vt.nice, PH. Se.,en O's, ?O' ,1oop, Al Obtrs¥trgt. Long l'l••cll, MO. Ve~T~e':'e;'H".°n' :a• 1loo11, Ken 8run•, Mt!ko 11, ;1• 11oo<i, Garllon L, Muriotw, Torrtncr. MO, Frtnes1, JI' 11ooP. LtonJ•d J 1!11k •'· P1lo1 Ver<fe1, PH, Lii Jo., lS' 1lao1>. Wll111m A. Ftlnbtrlll C11ehW<irl11, PH. Nini Jtn. ;r slooc, A. ClemtT•<m< tM C. M11ton, Sanft Fe Scrlng1. MO. Sorctrns, 71' slooP, lh¥ S.Cllt C"ltr. Los Angtltt. MO. !Jelle, 11' 1ioop, L..,., E. Fulltrten. Seal tlrtch, PH. Sta Wind. 31' sloca, l . R;, Swltert, Lent Be~ch. PH. Tr11>ldl1lon. ,,. •I-. E, G, Wtllf!I, C M. Cl1rk, Slerr1 M•dra, PH. C1rtb, '9' st-. Ltw...,.ct A. Soc~- 1"910~1 C11rd!l!·b'f·lh•·St1, PH, ' Soumerl'I Cro11, fl)' Y1w!, RIYmoncl A. N1•1rro, LDI AllMltJ. PH. Sapplllrt, :!!' sloolt, Ph!I G1111ewl!I, San Oltte, PH, Star R1klf, 3'' sleoD, J1ck E. Rll,y, Nl'llOPO•I hid\, PH. IE•Okl, 33' 1loop, Gorllon W. 8'°"'n, ldrUwlld PH. M1k1nl, lZ' llOOP. Htl'Old Mtc:lllOfl, LOl A1111tlil1, PH. Sol•c• 111. 2r 1!ool>. Jl'hn l , Smit~. lo"9 BtlCll PH. Andt lt, 'I' SlllOll, MIA PHmtn. B•ll»fi tsl1nd, Oii. Ctl'fPSO, .ll' sloop, Gf'Qrgt H-l!I . Art ltr..,n, N1wt>0rt lleach.._ l'H, Binni• L"' 2" ·~ 1oe•n••d I', Svk':i1i:;.'n~~'.'13~'t~~(:. Frink au'"-~· S&t1!1 l111>tr1, PH. Ncvt Vov_,, lf' 11ocP, Kt" G1rt,..r. P•lol Verou, PH. • l,dlos·Oo!, 3'' tlooP. George W, Coon, COl'Cf\I del Mir, PH, Y·Hol, :II' 110oP, 60b Hoitt l l'ICI Jol1t1 KrYlf'llff, Hacl"'6.i Heltl\!1, PH. l'ulm1r. It' .,,.,..1, J'"''Y H. Huntington Beach Office: Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., adjoining the San Diego Freeway, in Huntington Beach. ---... "'' "-....... m.1111 _ ... _ """""" °"1Cfl .aJ WIWllN 8tvd. • •·1265 ·-11711v......ave..141-1114 ...,. _ nl WlllNN ilN4. • llNNI ... -10lll & '*""°. •14Mt I nd Jl1\ll .!Koba. Pt_~, '"' llnatifl~ fl' ...... 0.... 'r ....... $.tl'I Clleo, QA, Tiit GrNI JIWT\llldti. tr ••. Okll; l.ind,..,, Sltll• Ant. Oflt, 0cro111, o.. sr •IOOlt It. '· e ... uc~1mp, COit• MM•· Oil. Queen Mlb, 7t' Klloonfr, llobirt L. Prl11tk!. HollY#OOll, 011. A....,1rlu1, »' •'-• JOlln H. Holld1r, $1nlt Ana, OR. Jubflttlon. 4' cun•r. H••'1 SI""'•"°· Mlr1le$IJ!, Olt, W1lr111. 16' 1loop, Wlllltm H, l(r-, P•cltlc Pt llltdt1, PH. llelfe•I II, ,,. .~. ...... A. Smith, Pi.v• GI! Rey, MO. 511,11"9 Ill, '1' ~·""'· N«mtn p, Reem, lltnd!o S1n11 l't, PH. .-,....,1c1ou1. l2' 1loop, llOb l ttcher, EK-ldo, OR. C1rlnt, "3' sloolt, Con H1tll:tt1, N1wPOrt 8etc~. OR;, T1l!V HO. '1' 1'""'• ltld11rd lflldley, Ntw"'1 l ffd>, l!H. J1no II, S1', 1100P, Qin Giiium, Slnlt 81rbtrt, PH. ~lty, W 1looP, Er11ttt K1n1ler, Co1t1 M .... OR;, $rllbu1, «I' 11ooP, T. T. llMll$1mi, l-&etc:ll.-011. HorW. '1' 11oo1i. Rff Cannon, 0.. A"911Ho OR. Y1nkff CllPll9•, "3' 11ooil, Ltrentt A, Wtlt1rtb, Norl~•ldllt, OR. Vtll \I,, Ml' 1IOOP, Jfablrt l . &illty, LOI A11111k11, Olt N111·N111, J3' 11DOD. ltoberl E. Ko!l1$, 110111..., Hllll, 011. V1Yt, JD' 11-. Ptll Utedll, Lont l t•cll, PH. C·l.lrk. 15' y1wl, W11!tr Cllt11, E!ICOndlllo, 011 . Wfndttar, fl' ,,_, W•ll~• £111, LI Jo!lt, OR. Wl1lon, .SO' 11-, Clltrltl H. MttY. Lt MOit, 011. Atr1UI. 1'' 11-, Frtc:I W. Mt!Of, Stn Olt tD, PH. Good ltlllk, 13' 1100P., Merton C1rlli. Ind Jon ltoblon. S•n Olteo1 OR. E•vlf. 30' 11oop, 11trbtrl A. Mtrkowlll. Lt Jall1. OR, l1lc11tllt, U' 11-, Joltn Klnea!d, Set i 8t1cll, OR. W•nGtrcr, 33' 11ooct, lllcll••d E. Canlel1, Hun1ln91on 9Ucll, OR, Flying (IQuCI, <IO' 11-, Gordon Ar,,,1tr-, Mlrlry dt1 Rtv. OR. 8ewltc~ecl. :W' 11ooP, Norm1n Seo!!, LOt!ll &eacll, 011. Em!IV Anti, 3" 1loop, JOMoh 8. Cl1y. Encl!IC, Oil. VIYtnl, :).I' 1100P. Robert Htr!Wtll, Coron• <!el Mir. 011. Enlt rPrlit, 7l" 1laoo, Mlrlltc Comtr. Norll\r!Gge, MO. Y•rt, w 11ooP, M1rcus w. H1lnt 1, P•loi V~rCHs, MO. Lor11tl, :I.I' 11-. ·Leon1•d J. P rlc,, Lo1 A11Vtlt1, PH. Wlfld Chlld, 75' Jloop, Lit Am11tro119, Co1t1 M11t, PH. Wlndbc<'M, JI' llCIOll, Vic l:llf'!lcll, P•1adtnll, PH. J•no 111. '1' 11oo1>, Robert M. Kelln. Paclllc P•l11tdft, 0 11 • Let Us Wrap It Up For You • with an AUTO LOAN tailored to your needs! Be£ore you buy a new ~ar. stop by First National and find out about the best way to finan ce it. We can give you a close estimate on how much we can loan on the c:aryouwant. Then, when you go 1o the showroom, you can deal aa a cash buyer-which is always the.best way. First National Bank ni onANGl cnum N•i" Oflkiottl t~ Pl•l• iii downi.o.,..Or1np BRANCH OFFICES· Or•n~: T111Jl.in 11t Collin• Ch11pm1n· Prospe<:!. Shopping Center C...,_ 'M-: M"• Vet<H On~' a.1.Ad~A l'*- 6ut& An.a;; 17th St.. at T111t.111 AYe. Ch1rl1m•, ¥1' 1loop, Ed Feo. l ent &e1ch, OR . Sloam•, 36' sloop, ~Id lttnkow, c~tvorli~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cl!Y, OR . SN HYmDll. '3' sloop, Jlm HOll1MOt!, ---- Roll1119 Hl!l1, PH. Pleltdu, 3'' •looO. Richard K, Smvtll. Huntington H1rb00r. 011. Jtrtbt!. 36' 1l110P. V!lan Couch, Cor-<!el Mir, 011:. Vollnl• II, lO' sloop, Mlcht•I Hirsh. Ne-I Bet<:ll, 011. Pog1so, •1• 11oo1>, Jott1 •Ml Ben Md(HfOll, S.n Olqe, OR. Aq111rltn, 30' 1kloc, H1,old G. MOl'tlltld, l orrui<e, PH. EKlldtro, 50' •IOOP &ii! Elfl1111er, Lllfl'I Br•c~. 011, $11rfl,e, 15' •loco. R•lch E. l'!eclltr, M1rl111 del Rrr, OR. klgu.c:!ou1. iJ' ,locP, G • Rt11'ello, LOt"I 8eac~. MO. Concoul1t1C1Cr. 30' 11oe1>, Sltnoa•d 1nd Ger1rd. 5etl 8eacl'I, PH. Sh•-· lo!' 11aoo>. Tom De1rocr11, O•n1rd, OR . V1l~nt, U' 1loop, Keith B. Collins, Cost1 M~11, 011 . Sff M1n•. 30' •locP. 01v!d 0 . Lu•, PllYI <!el Rev, PH. L"l(Y, 311' 11ocP, (t rier G1ge. ltPdon<le 8fac~. 011. 8oome•1ng, JO' llllOD, J . P. Swttl'IY, H""f1119ton 8tlth. PH. Adel.ilntP, :I.I' 1I0011, J im M1rtln, Laevn1 a~ach. 011. Ci ndi, lo!' 1'°°9. Gene H1n111h, Sin Clego,011 . Se,..nlty, 16' 1loop. Ar!h11r Wynn, Gtll'lltll Hllll, PH. Jll'ID•dft, XI' !lllOo. Poter E1!lm1n, 81llloe l1l1nG, l'H, NY!ICh, JS' 11-, llObtfl 0, lltllll, Lt JOlll, PH, Wlndtol\9, 1S' 1l110P. W1111.-E, Gledt.ler, Cc1!a Mew. MO. • Albltro1.,_ 46' KllOOMr. E . Poonder tlld Sumrtll, C....tt Mtll. PH. Adlcs, lo!' otooa, lob G1ylM1, G!9fld1le, 011 . COl'I~~. 1$' 11ooe>. John B. 8ussl119, S.nl• Monie•, l'H. C11amer, •3' cat, Jelln Mallett, Pacific Pallw<lt1. ORC•. ltl'll l(el, •6' tll, C•IJfTlr!l\t t nG ll1n- dle, $In Gabriel, OllCA. Buccan!i!r I. ;~· c1!, Itri K. Al'ldtrson. ORCil>. Puff. 1~' ell. John E. Schntpf. Hunllngton &e•th. OllCA. Hlrondelle, n• cat, R1n""" W1lrod, Ma!!bu, ORCA. Alrlo1. 36' trimaran, Bob Cameron, ORCA. lmu1, J6' cal, llcna!d P, llcbln1kv, Wttlmln•ltr. ORC•. Im! l Oll, •3' cal, A. Victor Ster11, Seal Betel!, ORCA. Mtgnlfklfll Obteulo~. ~~· c11, Georgf NMll!men, Torr1nct, Ol!CA C1fkjn, n· ell, J1ck F. Sc~ttftr, Bur!N"k, ORC ... WlnGmlll, 3'' ti!, Al!red Hol11n<1, Hl!'rmosl lltach, ORCil>. M1l1m1. •S' cit, Jtck w. Swart, NPW!Klrl Bttc11, ORCA. C1rou•ln' II, •O' ti!, Mkh1tl Ki nt, B•lbcl l•ltnG. OllCA, P1ttv·C1t. u• c1!, Jalln P. Purstll, El St0unclo, ORCA. Alltr·Cll, ~3' cat, l!lob Jc""'' la C1n1ct1, OllCA. Naiad. 25' '''· W1llv Collins, 51n O!"!lo, OllCA, Toni, l6' ca!, T~om•• Sault•. Lo119 Bt•th, ORCA, Gian Sllwe•, 11. 51'1' c11. JtY Joh"..,.,, Lt C1n1<1a, ORCA. .Y.ok&I, 36' col, Cat1rld G. 81nk1. LOt"I &e•ch, ORCA. S~• Smakl!', Sii' tit, ~"" kool• o• ""'"lea, Los A11$1el••· ORCA, Pocc Loco, 11' 11-, Herold G. Kent.,, EnclflC. MO, FlrrbronG, '!' ''"°"• Gto•ot O. Wt•!, Nrw1>0rl &e1ch, 011. Outsl, 11' tloeD, B•aw". ,_, • ..,.., •nd £rlck..,n, Los An9elt1. MO. Com111nero, :16' 11000, JOltPll H. llo~tnskv. i1>n1he1m, PH .• Cl VI, 14' tlOOI', OoMld 8. KIM!ltr, P1•1<len1, PH. Michelle, •l' tloca. Gear9f G. l ink. HunH119ton tlflCP!, OR. Valtro, '6' stoop, 01vld C. N•wm1n. San Oltgo, MO. t<wlnv1<1, 25' \low, Jim Atkinson, l°" An11tltt, MO. Aau1rl~s. 21' 11ooP, f"Omll R. Wot>. 1»m1, Hunllno!on Btlt~. PH. lmlH!luou1, J(I' tlOOP, Wm. 0. p,,..,.,,, S.n G1brltl, PH, K11lcllt, ll' lloo», I. P199 Scwt:,i, Hun!lnotcn lkKPI, OltCA. Sh1lom, 15' t!Ooll, CtYIG 511Yllf'l'tll n, Fre1no. MO. llonc!O. 16' tlool>, Hl,..,tY C1ntor, LOI A,119fl·t!t, PH. l•l1f'lll Ml••· :J.1' stcca, ;)Joh~. H•trll, Mtrln1 d•I Rtv, PH.r . Ka'l't Ktnl, Jll' sloe!', C~1,ln l . Fuller, long Btech. PH. 81be 11, 3'' Jfoop, All X Gorby, Mttlt11 dtl Rev. OR. Mi l H11Nor, H' sloo<>, 1-1.,,,.., SCllwttl. Lo. Anoelt1. PH. LlcD'lct! Pl111. 71' 11ooJt, Ltrrr Ktrnn, LOI A"'eftl, MO. L_.....,lvrt, U' 11oci>, Gf'Or1tt L_, HtwlhorM. MO. • ' . TUESDAY, APRIL 28 Rand H FLOOR COVERING 1904 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA CORNER 19th AND HARBOR PHONE 548·4836 FULL LINE FAMOUS NAME BRANDS •Floor Tile• Linoleum• Accessories LASEST DESIGNS IN TEXTURED AND EMBOSSED FINISHES NEWEST DECORATOR COLOR COMBINATIONS EXPERT ADVISE ON "DO IT YOURSELF" COVER A SPACE 12' x 12' AS FOR LOW AS FREE ES Tl MA TES ON COMPLETE INSTALLATIONS -· Visit Our Show Room our be~t selling patterns for your selection . See 45 of installed STORE HOUR~ 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. SUN. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. WE HONOR MASTER CHARGE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ••• Huntingfion Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal Savings, wherf! your account is IAFE • CONVENIENT • AVAILABLE M•rket fluctuatlons don't worry Coast & Southern savers. their capital Is always rising Jn value. Hfgl'lest eamlngs conslatent with Nfety when you save at COBlt 6 Southern. IRSOUWCE TD $21,DOI / RISDUIC!S OVU $100 MllllOK ASK ABOUT THE INSIDEBS CLUB A NEW WAY TO SAVE MONEY -A U,500 BALANCE fH YOlJtil ACCOl.M' MA.Kl& YOU ELIGIBLE. •MDllAIU an'1 lllf Vtn ...,. lhd. • •· 1171 ---· ti\!. LOOUlt • ..,,., ... , HIGHEST PREVAILING RATES 5.00%--5.13% PassboOk; No Minimum. 5.25%-5.39" Ttiree Month Certlncate; No Minimum. 5. 75%-6.92% en.v .. , conllk:ate; 11.000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% T .... v .. , c.n111e11e: 16.000 Minimum • L4 Cft'IOCMTl"I ll'lllll ....... •W.1fQI ---............. Qr.•SS141DI IAlfTAMA LOM IUVtcW MPO'f't 1111 No. ........ '714) 14T.Q7 • , ' , ' , , , ' ' , • • • • » ' , , ' ' » ' ' , • ) . ' . ' ' ' ' • ... . ., ·--~·-.,.-, .--.... '*4 Wfi'4' C';:\:£l • ..... ':";""'""'"''"'"""'"-=-,,,,. .. er,,,_4.,,1 r."";~c•-•';" • .,.,,,.._ ... ..,,,..,.,,,,,.'!"'_"",,_Tf'..,, .• ,...., ..... ~.,..,..,...~.~· ... ~ . .,,.,,. o~o S'lf~• ...,..,,,...., __ , ~• ~--· _..,, ...... ...,.,........,..,._,_~.,_.,.,,• ,,.,,,,..,..,..,_.,., • • . • • • • ' DICK TUCY, . -. TUMILIWEEDS I AM 1'1.ANNIN6' A 1'1\IVATE 1'A1ll1NG-SEllGH. I WANT 10 Pl.l1\CIV\SE ONf Ol :0.1$,? Of SAND. 1JO WU JJfLI v""" • MUTI AND JEFF JUDGE l'ARKER • .l!UT,1\ilS Hi!RE'S 1llE pesllftT, Ll'L FEW:RI T' HAVE A 9A1HIN' 9EA CH YA NEEDS A l..AKf. ER A oce~! -.aw, WMA.!'5 lHIS A&OCIT /t.POPTI~ A CMILP? Are 'IOI TAlklN6 A!OlfT VOD RSEU:? PON'T 'a LAWYERS EVER AN SWR: A OIE!-TION, SA.M ? I AstCEP'MOW!Jllfflc.tlLT IS IT F(!R A 51¥61.E PeR50tll TO ADOPT A CMll.I'? fLL ANSWE!it TMAT • THERE AR'E OtJ ESTION WMCN YOU; TIMES WMEN GIVE ME A FEW -,.·YOU'RE IM· il.OG.OETAILS! ·'.~p0SS15LE ! I DAILY CROSSW,ORD ••• by R. A. POWER I I ACROSS l So1py t mintrll 5 Sctnic arta of Quebec 10 Bovint l~ Ont's ow n· Pre fir 15 lllcGill 1111dic al professor l& Amtrfcan .. Indian ~S Geraint's wile ~O Ttnnis game lea turf 48 Arrangtments SO Thost with Inborn ta ltnts 52 lnsant: Slang 54 Milk : Prtfix PERKINS . . . By Chester GOlld WMV ooes "'l'llE t.MCaD ~ PE.R.$0NA L L ICENSE ATTIUt.CT TI-IEM.~EN IT IMEVITA&l...V S2AL.S THEIR DOOM 7 WMV? ww r By Tom K. Ryan yi)iJ Mf.P-N 'i!JU OON'T CARRY A(Cf.5501\IES? \j fl I By Al Smith YOU'RE eEAUTIFUl! • ~.JO .~ By Harold Le Qoux ItL,TEl l YOU All NO! YOU'RE 60ING A!OUT IT AFTER TO TELL M£ RIGMT PINNER! YOU'LL BE NOW! li\ORE REA50NA8LE ! ' 17 Tapr rtcoidet accessoty 19 Decorativt ve ssel 55 lndlc1Uons of solar i1Ctlvily 59 Choose •130170 MISS PEACH 20 Unpltasant smell 21 Tritd foolish txperiments 23 Sweet lrozen foods 25 Dishonest person 20 Gels possess ion •• 30 Commerc ial vehltles 3• Bt ftslivt 35 Frost 03 Roundish viscous lump 64 Cooking appllanct 66 Ffmlnlne namt 67 Wtar away 68 Sctnt 69 Mal[ or Buddy -·· 70 Leaf or a cal,YK 71 Stites DOWN ' l Holt and McCo.y I Used IS I 33 Linger s place of 36 Award for conllntllt11t b1av,1y 9 Htrm its •o Causfs to 10 Strattgt111 rtcovtr for 41 Ctast· cooctallng fires 11 P!!rfume 44 Ont who obtai11td makts /okts fr,111 47 Naµira !16w1rs: '' Youn!I Var. animal 12 lf lslay Sl Ki" of 13 Nouri.sh omam1nt 18 lllysterlous 53 Bus iness 22 Equality tslablishrnrnt 2• Finch SS Fungua 2b Wlntmaklng plant apparatus disease 27 Entertainment 50 Bont [ f. •• h U'L AINER SALLY IANANAS • • GORDO WOMEiJls LllJERATION MOVEME}/Tf MOON MULLINS l DoN'T SEE: ~~ You CAM STAND OM '>OUR. fE:fT ALL f»,Y, WILLl,AM- 1 C/.N'T· !t. ,. , I ·I '1 ANIMAL CRACKERS _f SM/oU. IJOllJ T/1:1.1, TAl<E-Cff, R..Y, Al;J> ~u~~/l.r MQ f'!:E-DEl E)i:MllleD l%S11utTl01l f - I Gu&" WWP S~TTEllr BE aooo. I IT WA~ 1.01E. AT JllllTSIOl!T/! 'LITT\..E DETAILS DON'T MATTER..'! ./ By Mell 'YES . rr PIZEVENT.S MOT+-11.~ ANO .-.~ SORT9 OF ™H'.i5 .. 37 Gasp 38 Time of ,., 2 Kind of enlfanct• 3 Insects ' Curtah1 fliture form 57 Not ont 28 Not 58 lnstrumtnl conctaltd p11t By Saunders and Overgard STEVE ROl'ER • 39 Most unotlgin1l 42 llltadow 43 Water skiers' I 111 illtU , ' I " " " " ., " -. . " . . hldtr 5 Burrowing animal fi Trtt 1 Opening 29 Kind of 60 Ass1111 strlkt silkworm 31 Kind of •t Co111111unlty Illy 02 letttrs 32 Sound of 65 Crtlt 1 btll mountain s ' 1 • ' 15 • I \'I "t l'EANUTS ! I I ' '.' ' • -. l' I I • , . ' IN HIS EXCITFHEtn; 1£0 NfTS M BRAKE nxJ HAND.t-TliE $PEE/Jll«i CAR SWE!lf!F5- LA51 Nl611T I DREAAIEP ll!AT UTILE R!P·tJAl!EP 61Rl AHP ! wru EAllN6 L!.l(IJ ~-0-,, ·M ' Thursdn, ARrll 301 1970 ' DAILY PILOT JJ :. r • ' " . •• IOft~-.. By~ ly Charles Barsotti By Gus . .Arrw.-i By Ferd Johnson ,,~ 1 WISMYDU ~ WtllfN1TSO #ll1'1P Of MICE!! I Roger Bollen ....... -"'--'':'! Nl11'6! :LIM 1)¥Re!.- u 0 DENNIS THE MENACE • '~ IS A PE.'IW £lCTAA-! • I • • I ---------------·-----------------~--------------------'-~~'---'--"'---~=---=..c=-.:.:__ __ ..llJ(_.IJ ( I t I ~ ·--.. ------------~--..,-----------~--------':""""'"----------- Thumlaf, Aprll 30, l 970 _..... .. , ~ ;' ' :-: .. 11 f• Tell tilt Tn6 (C) (30) mi·--·-(C) m _... !Cl tt lwl-"" '"' " 11 Tro7t. ~ Ml bmtflldl IN h· 111111 ftm1fld1L .... II 4 PM A NEW TIME FOR . "* PUTNAM NEWS 011 KTTV i.,1 ~·-ICl llOl""1"""'· • ID--!Cl (JOI C.1 Yt1 Tlf Tllis1 (C) (JO) ; . Ro• Marie. JiJI a.nus. ind Mcwer Am~m aunt • GEORGE SEGAL, INGER '* STEVENS -"THE NEW INTERNS" -Part I I 8 Sil r0ea lilMir. '1\e New 1...,.... Pait I (d11m1) '&4-~•li· th•d C.11111. Batbltt Eden, Dean klMI, Stlftnit PonrJ. 5iof)' of I lfllllll ol inllfns lo 1 bl1 CJt1 l!ol· pit1I. lndiridull trtltdin underlie fht wild p1rtin ind 10m11d111 that IOIS oa in Ille rAlbtic mos1lc: ol lif1 111 1 fllltrDt!Olltan l!osp;tt~ IM Y11 "'* (JO) "" -(C) 130) 9tlf T"• (C) (60) Cf) AIC &Mlnr; N.., (C) 130) Wlll1 l'I •••? (JO) "P1pe11 Pia eon." ~ (j) CIS News (C) (30) itl-IJO) Em 0 CMllltl (JO) ®"""ill till..., (C) (60) J1d: Whitt, Ma Drtilr. Glori• Cl'ltf, P1ttl Btlbe. 9:00 I) QI (j) CIS Tbin61y Mowil: ~ ~ ... (ld¥tnturtl '60-,-f'fler Finch. E~• Butok. A HCSet mission Is ulidertak.en lo pr~nl 1 Cldle of diamonds from lalrflc inlo !ht hinds of Hitle1'1 arm . O '\ffl (j) $ T 011 JoMS (C) (60) (RJ Tonf Bennett, Vikki Carr tnd lht Act Tndinc C'.ompany aunt. a:> Aq11i l m htl... (30) t :JtD UllC lh111 ~1ci1 IC> t601 : 8 ._ Alltl ... (C) (90) Redd : Fe.a, Nora CJolby, M11y Lou Col- "300 @ !Ill -it! (JO) (R) "Penonnet -The Sho0tin1." Tiit wim (Vircfni• Gr11& and VtlOftict Cartwri&flt) ot two critkllly·wound· ed otficer1 find tittle solau i11 tach otbl(.1 company. • I lillS Ind YIC lHlttt llltll I u "' c... c... tc> <30) Dou McClu11, Jeultt WtheJ ind Burt Reynolds cuest. fJ ... (C) (30) Buter Wa1d.t m,., r..u llhrtllli 1c> (301 I!) ..... (C) (lO) Bill Johns. «:) HMtscope mi ,.,.!. Hlftnltl (30) illlCllhnJ -llOI . ,,..rTI M-lri ..._ (C) (30) lO:OOD fil@mD1t1 Mtrt11 (Cl -l.!!.I ..,_,... 11-1 (60) Goldie H1wn, Dennis W11Ytf fD C.JersAou Wiili ~ .., Ind Di:im De luist cul$!:, (Ruchtd· (30) Mr. 0., tllks to trchtolocisl· ultd) anthropoloaitt ltwil S. B. lt1U, -CD -IC) 1601 abold llis hlll·ttnlUIJ lonf llllth -. throup Alric• f« ctun to t11t in-~irDCI>Ci>"•"' 7000 <Cl (R) ctslori of moGttn min. 'Journe1 to Nowhl!l'e." Brennan . fails Into 1 trap when lie t1ke1 1 ft CIJ "'-Slld. Siii SM (C) (lO) bitllfiful tlrl Into Etst Berlln ta I m lltidn J4 (C) (60) help her look !or hl!I' 1i!ln1 brother. It) Ulll 9-ct 11.,.n (C) (l0) Diana B1ktr &u!sts. ' i Jael Latfltm. O •it: "flll•m" (sci-Ii) IM- Cii) Dime It Ylfdld (JD') James Whitmore, Edmund Gwenn, >Gin Weldon, Jamu Arnes, Fus • PtM. state police dixowr mys- ' CIS ~I ... ('C} (30) teri0111 mu'11en in the MQjavt t .. W~er Cronkilt. Desert •nd pemmenlll liwesti"· D WW'• 1111' U.? IC) (30) 1ations rem I the 1t1iv1t of strt1111 m I LM 1MJ (30) uutures in tile 11e1. Tiit lllm won e 11111 tilt a.a ('C} (30) • 1954 ActderaJ Aw•rd noml111tion ~@ Tiii Alllrictll Wm: (C) (lO) for "~st Sptcial Ef1edl.." m Allln! (lO) m "'"r Adam (60) a (I) Trwtll • C:....mMU CC) el bbl (30) • C\ TM ....... (C) (30) Ill) lM C.ltllNntt:s {60) • 1 8,i)1'Sf'S1F tl lhrit (!>S) ' • •!f" °'""' ·~ (C) (30) 10:30 m Tiit AMellls IC) (601 (R) "Sllould Student Disruplon Bt Au· tom1titllly Expelled!"' . ,,, .. IJ9 (J)f..., .... (C) (JO) • (R) Cfllj "'°"' l!rto In 1p1rtmnt 1!11 Mrtlll (30) • ' al lier own ind tnc:OUnt1n 1n·111- . tirtly NW tit of problems. Ttny 11 :00 119 CII @El News (C) Burnham 1unts.. D QJ OO m .... , ..... (C) D @CJl m -(C) (60) (R) "How To Btcomt 1 God-8 ht SttJ h70fMI dns.." Rtbtce.1 Boon•. wilh unwel· D @(])G) ""'* (C) to1111 1Dilt111U from two bumbt!n1 brotlfers. it inillalr,en for 1 toddess by lndll111. Yictor fr1111Ch ind Med Flory tutst. a Ill! mm'""'"' """' W.id (tj (30) '1ht Grett Rid tD M9rit: .. , Mtrritd I Wo1111n• (comedy) '5&--Geor1• Gobel, Nth T1lbot. ID Ht Slid, She Slid (C) Apes." Part I. Film lhowin1or•n·11 15 ~rli'I C" ....,. ...... •lb 1ut1ns of BorlllO at 1 r1h1bilitttion : \UI ~ In.Im~ •n: "'" , c1mp Whlft lhtY Ill ~Ill t•uftil II I WOl'lll fl. lo rljoi11 tht ju11ct1 world. ; I DMllitl $ Mewlt: "Tiii EntNll~&a(jJMtn'"'1il'l(C) ..,.. (comtdJ) '51-Jerry Lewi!-D m Wianr CtrJN (Cl Brilft Donlfty. Tlw Mid If ,.,,.. Mutual stUdiol Nr11 jeny, os!tfl· fJ Hi,._r htrol . , ~ " 1n emM bof. w h1 re•I· a ·m ~ c:mtt 1c1 ily 11 1PJ 11 t.1 ~·nstlni 1111- . I • • ( -n. I ID Tr6" c c II • (C) (30)1 ....... -(60) • n.tJt 1111 (C} (30) .lo AIMI W...,., producw of Jotin Osbofnt'• ID MO'lit: -O.r• Wallrs" (dr1m1) '15-Ml'rle Oberon, Fra11thol Tont. m N£1" P'lt)'lloult (R) '111~ o1 Tetn." "~ for Ga1t Diiion," 1utsls. tZ:OO O C.11111unity lulltlill lol1d (C) ~ II Cnr. • AMI (JO) l:OO U MOIM: .. Ad II V'iolt11tt" (dra· f G C....... • StpMoe ma) '.t9-Y1n Htnin, Robert Ry1n, .Nnel ltlP . I Ql(j)JI• N•••rs (C) (60) 00""" (t) • ) ··-Newton -· -,... ID Adiol TllMtn: "Boomeian&. .. 8 llMt ._ (C) (30) L1rrr 811· Dini Alldrews, Ja111 W11tt. ..,,... ffR hosts. Jtelf Clrter, Sut Ant ., 4 lanfdon. MiV c.octnon.. Jacll Hiley, , 1_; Carolyt .loftls Ind R1y Bolpt &uul. Lill m All-fticM SMw: "Pblinum Hi2h school," "!Itek Dr11on of M1n- r1n1r," "They WOft'f Btl ie¥t Me.'" : '. D lffl·Clla!"" •~ !Cl <JOI ; ' (RJ ~ht Snow Mlllt Go Oa." Mii, 1 f>on Ind hit Plflflts lft tripped 1 It Kentledy Airport bf 1 Wiutrd. 2:)0 8 ,._/lliiw Ul Tllil D1J (C) OAmME MOVIES (ClH'l'ledy) 'SJ-flettr ~l1n, ll1trt· •nl Jeffries. ID (C) "'11lt Mllfll" (mys111Jl '60 -Nlriu VltdJ, rt11sto TozzL 12:JO D "'•"""' 1ttt1111ot• (lft•ma> 1:30 0 (C) "'t'll CH11~ llNI Mittitst ·~avid Nlwt11. ,._..lrt" (drama) '51 -Sv$1n l :lO tD "Mvrdtr br Contrtc1• (mylterJ) H1rw11d, Rory Cllhoun. ·~Virtetnt Edwtnls. t:OO D "111 Dtlttl, ,,... (111ys11ryl '54-Ua¥d Brldttt.. SlntOM Silvi. .. .,,__ lllC." (mnltlJ) '49-Rob· , " trt Lowery, Allnt C'11J11nt • .. .. ' ~ .... II "T't WMt Arn tf tJte ltw" 4:30 II (Cl "'llr111 Doone'" l•Mnturt) '51-«iehlnl GrMnt, B1rb111 Hilt. • • • . ' ., ;~ " ... .. :1 :1 ;I :1 • '• ,,, e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Quelity Print in9 end Oependebfe Service for mor• th•n • qu•rt•r of • century. PILOT PRINTING / U1l WIST IA&IOA ILft,. MIWPOn l lACH -Ml ... J1' .: .. ____________________ ,,, •+ J. ·• DAILY PILOT l ltfl' .....,. Mutual Ad11iiration LaDoMa deBarros admires the finery of Greta Smith while Ralph Quick admires Miss deBarros in this scene from "Waltz of the Toreadors," resum· ing Friday at the Huntington Beach P!aybouse. Tustin Players List . . Cast of 'A pple Tree' CastiJlg has been announced ror the first production of the new Tustin Communit y Players-the musical ''The Apple Tree," which will be enjoying its Orange County premiere. T.Pe evening or one-act plays based on stories by Mark Twain, Frallk Stockton and Jules Feif!er, is being directed New Theater Tryouts Set ,The newly organized Irvine Community Theater has an- nounced readings for its rirst production, Neil Simon 's first comedy, "c:ome Blow Your Hom.'" A cast or three men and three women between the ages of 18 and 60 is required for lhe show. Roy McCann is directing. Tryouts will be held Sunday at I p.m. and Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the emp!oyes' lunch area of the Irvine Company offices, 550 Newport Center D r i v e , Newport Beach. "Come Blow Your Hom" y,·ill be presented during the last l\\'O weekends of June. FW'thcr information may be obtained by contactin g McCann at 832-0057. ANIMALogic • ,(," ... 11-1-'HIC GOODNESS M'f fAl.'5 JUS1 Pof'PED. •· by James Paskel, a newcomer to California who has staged several productions ill Michigan. Heading the cast are Steve Patterson and J acque Sherrill who play three different characters th roughout t h e show. Supporting parts are being taken by Beth Alex, John B~gle, Bill Metcalf, John Pblllips and Richard Cavert. Completing the Tustin cast are Linda Rogas, Jack Hebert. Mark Rickels, Dee De e Baranowski, Mike Egan, Gary Aldrich. Steve Doutt, Enid Pfiillips, Shirley Wilson, Joany Fairbairn, Frances Peterson. Pat Finocchiaro, L a u r e I Davis. Debi Olson, Judy [)om, browski and Robin Miller. The three ''Apple Tree'• plays-" Adam and Eve,'' "Passioftella" and "The Lady or the Tiger"-wlll open May J4 and run ·Fridays and Saturdays through May 30 at the Tustin High School gym, 1171 Laguna Road. Further information mtiy be obtained by calliRg the Tustin Parks and Rec rea tion Department, sponsor of the theater. at 544-8890. Poll Records Lallorite Gain~ LONDON (AP) -Prime !\1inister Harold Wilson and his Labor party got another boost today from a public opi· nion poll. The Daily ~tail's National Opinion Polls record- ed the popularity lead of the opposition Conservatives had dropped 'from 7.5 percent last month to 2.9 percent. Last week, two opinion polls put the Laboriles narrowly in the lead for the first time in two years while a third registered a big drop in Tory support. Stars in Vegas Carol Burnett and J l m Nabors of the CBS ranks will share a tw~week engagement at Ceasar's Palace in Las Vegas beginning June 4. "t;, Jouth Coast Repertor_v THURSDAY -"Excellent'' • , . L. A. TIMES "WE IOMHD IN NM HAVEN" F1id1y/S11turd1y/S1111d1y thr11 May 10 "ONE FL~ OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST" A Theatric4l Shock Treatmenl " •.. Daily Pilot l'Olt llUESl!ll:VATIONll CALL.,.._,.,._, IW ,._,..-1 • ..,.., Ct•I• M- ORANGE COUNTY'S INDOOR MONTHlY MARKET of ANTIQUES & COLLECTABLES ... OVER $1,000,000.00 WORTH Of ANIIQUES Ora nge County's AINI Unkrv• Antiqu• Show • J oi. &Joe fun • SATURDAY and SUNDAY 11 A.M. Tot,... 11 A.M. TO I P.M. MAY2&3 ot The b.hlblt luUdln9 Oron99 County felf"8round1, Costa Mesa AH ho-.rt WUI .. DrMtM ... ~ •-....... 1· IYllYOlll CDllll 50" 25c "-.. .. i.. ' • Muriay, Schisgal Speculates on Fame Filming of 'Casablanca' Confusing, fugrid Says By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UP I) There are those of us who never can tum off television reruns of the classic 1943 Oscar-wl a ning movie "Casablanca," s t a r r i n g Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman. What a wooderfully crafted movie It seems, this film that touched the heartstrings of a generation. And how amazing it was, therefore, to bear Miss Bergman, on ABC-TV's Dick Cavett Show the other night, tell of the difficulUe s in mak- ing it. Cavett asked Miss Bergman whether she had a happy memory of the film, and she replied: "Quite a difficult memory because I cannot tell you what confusion there was on that picture. Nobody knew what we were going to do, and I was iiure that thirl picture was going to be the worst picture in the world . . . I wasn't forced to do it, but J was a little worried be.cause they iiaid we had no script." She said, however, that the producer to whom she was under contract, David 0 . Selznick, persuaded her to do "Casa blanca." Among other things, he told her she would be beautifully dressed and the most beautiful woman in Casablanca-and this appealed . to her because she felt she had JtOt had e110Ugh such glamorous roles. "So," she recalled, "I said: "Well, lhe thought ls very nice. but I must h a v e something to say, and there isn't a word of dialogue'.'' But there was Bogart, and, she told Cavett: "Who could resist him? So I came very happy onto the set and was given the first dlalogue, and Jt was written and changed and addei:I to lhe whole time "I had certain love scenes to play-you remember I had Paul Henreid; ~ played my husband whom I thought was dead and then came back." And there was her other lov e, Bogart. "And I said : 'Well now, 1 don't know-which o ne of these two men do I stay with at the end, and who am I really in love with?' And they ·said: 'Well, you play in between because we haven't made up our minds yet' ••• "So it was very dll'!icult ... it you don't know if yoo should just pretend that you love this man and if you should play ·it kind of cool. or should you have certain glances of bor~om .• , "We came to the very end, and you remember the shot with the airplane, and Paul Henreid is flying off, and there I came, and I don 't want to leave Humphrey Bogart, and there he st.ands with Claude Rains. I remember the scene so well, and I 88.id: 'Now. well really. you have to make up your mind.' "So they said : 'Well. we still haven't made up our minds, so we will shoot it both ways.' So fine . Now I do the first scene saying good· bye to Humphrey and I gl"I into the plane, and I look at him. and we fly off, and Humphrey walked away Into the clouds, and they said : 'Print it-that's the end. We don't have to do the other version.' But they didR't know 11 until they shot It . . • they decided that wa1 1 beauUtul shot, and who woula want tht other end ~ that m tblnk ol U! VIVAt CINOO DE MAYO lit ooe of Me:d6o'1 11~• H0Udt111I Wt'h ba'ria1 • 1111 I &1 cwlbratioci wltll Fimror~ Mlllio. Dancm, C...t ud lUaiclt11 °' F'ridlr, S.1Dnil7 ud SllDdty. Do1'1 -. itl · • ,. Nothing UI 111111 left Ht ol "Tbt A•ventmn" • --Elllllm-1-1111 111111111 llAllllB lozj 1 It lo01ll 11Mlli111r ~MIHllBU!!llS ... ---~- ! PLUS I DT ACTIU S WIHNl l ' I lftdo """°" ~ -.... "'"' -'9 '-""'-lw. loa. -Ot, JnU!lO • HELD OVER 1 1 I 'Ihe:11J.nne 'If I . ' 'Miss:Jaafllrodie ' I I· .. -I ,,,._. COLOR n DEWXE_ --ALSO- hlf ActrHS MAGGI! SMITH 5 . P. U.TINCio 8~~8:!~~ * * BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS * * HUNTINGTON BEACH • 847·9608 Direct from lrs Roadshow Run 2nd Week-NGw at Po pular Prices An epic drama of adventure and exploration! "i '.'i "' ~ • ·-....... 4 •• --... -~-~~-·~~--~--------------------------------------------- ~ ': .-. "••1·•1'• . .. ...., . " • 'Welby' Becomes YolJllg's ·comeback By VERNON SCOT!' HOLLYWOOD, (UPI) - Robert Y Ojll1g Is the most durable father figure o n television, making a comeback t4is se~n when most actors JiiB age are a>111!goed to bit part!.' . ln the Utle·rote of "~ Welby M.D.-," Young topped the rati'iigs once this aeason and has· ~n in or near the top 10 for most of the year. His a.cbie,vement ts es~ nplable because medical shows were supposed to have perished on tbe operating table. ~ Young, a pragmatist, is grateftil. His first s bow , "Father Knows Best" in which he played Jim Anderson. was a leading series for six years. ll was in fifth place in tbe Nielsens when it was discon- tinuo;d. • wJUl h1I footwork. The lruth of tbe matter ii that cWtain televllton ,stars are almost indestructible wltb viewers. Red Skelton, JackleG!euon, Ducllle Ball; Ed .SUWvm lllld Lawrence Welk are amoac thooe with whom the populace has enjoyed a io,,.-<lalldlnr romance. Robert Young, q!lite simply, has returned to the fold. AJJ an insurance man or doctor, his voice, CUtures and mannerisms exude ~ of character, steadiness a n d courage -components of the father image. · Women see him' as husband, father, brother or wise uncle. Men would feel confident if he was•the guy removing their gall bladders. Making Music" Together Laguna Chamber Music Society vice presidents Dick Lewis <nib!) and George Gade accept it.he DAILY PILOT'S Euterpe award from music cr1tiC Tom Barley. The chamber group was judged be6t Orange County concert organization of the 1969-70 season. · Th\/rlday, April 30, 1970 DAILY P11.11T U Fo-.mtala Valier 'l'heate..-. ·, ~ . 26 Kids S~~ght I or Pla:ys ~ New Comedy Cast Listed ENDS TUESDAY BEST ACTOR JDlfN GUN KIM WAYNE • CAMP8EU. • OARS~ W,t.•:•. ........ ...,.l! 671-62" • 2905• ._, CMlt Hwy. COfON dol Mir ITS HERE! ONE OF THE BIG COMEDY DRAMAS OF THE YEAR His' 0 Window on Main Street" followed and lasted Jess lhan a season. Having disappeared from regular television exposure for almost a decade, t h e n resurfacing to acclaim in-dicates Young is loaded with----------'-------~------------­"The Merry Wives of Hot· matiki," an original comedy 1/' ' ,... ., ' "Jenny" "It's been 10 years since l played Jim Anderson," the actor said. "The time Japse has softened the focus on the character I used to play. "The advantage · of Welby is that the potential for an anthoolgy e:tists, built around a c~n~al figure. The audience Is able to identify with one charlctef, yet new faces are regularly introduced. "Viewers need a single in· divid1.1al or a family unit they can count on. It's possible for me to appear in a show in two or three small scenes and the viewers would be aware that I'm still there." Young, a gentle and iflo- telligent man, is da;zling us Nice Kitty personal chari s ma , an overworked term for magical cbarm. The American M e d i c a t Association has cited the show with a certificate of merit. And Youn~ has imbued Welby with the image of a physi- cian's dedication to his calling. The only unreal note on the show is an honest approach to the physician's unwill- ingness to make house calls aod the &ize of tbeir bills. Clearly, young's bedside mannet Is superior to that of Vince Edwards, D i c k Chamberlain, R a y m o n d l-.1assey. Sam Jaffe and other sawbones w~ at one time took video's Hippocratic oath. This feline cub is one of a species that is fa st be- coming extinct. Conservationist Bill Burrud will in- troduce and narrate HAnimal World," a new series on ABC, tonight at 7:30 on Channel 7. NOW SHOWIN& "FANTASIA" NOW PLAYING WITH THEWllD' CI NE D(lME ~;.1:! Ell •I o • " I 0' 'I •• • ' ' '*'''''''' I ............... "JENNY" . plu• "HOT MILLIONS"• Ac....-ny A•111 Wlllnft\ ...... $1111111 CONTINUOUS SUNDAY, l:JO P'.M, UCLU5IYI OIJtN•I OOUNn INGAGEMIElifT '• Foms ,.. .,... ,._,. Ill: Mltll • ,,...171' W ... ffp: 7:30.10:00 s.t. -S...: 12:10.J:ot 5:30.1:00.10:10 •Gloomy Gus Is Your Kinda Guy 'Dobie Gillis' Finding Career in Business 'Sesame Street' by JAck L. Bellamy, will be the next produCtion at the Long Beach Comm unit y Playhouse. Wins Peabody Directed by Bertr am Tan.swell, the show w i 11 "Sesame Street," a popular feature Dan Baurac, Barbara NE\V YORK (UPI) By GENE HANDSAKER we've gone from bad to worse, N a t i o n a I E d u c a tional \Crooker, 8 e t t y Motsinger, a hodgepodge of nothing really Te.levision (NET) series for ""iBN'dy Keene and Bernard LOS ANGELES (AP) -For appealing." children that also has an ai:r Siffion. The latter two actors five years on televisioo be· peal •-adults has won JI kilo o When he was 7, Hickman ...., • are we wn on range played Bob Ctt mm i n g s ' becanle a child actor like his one of the 30th annual Geor ge County stages. TlCttNICOLOR' · "P.tJ\AMOIJNT pS.,M nephew. For four years he Id b th 0 t Foster Peabody awards for Ttie play will open May 15 . ~ was girl-conscious Dobi e 0 er ro er arry ' now a excellence in broadcasting. for a six-weekend run at the ALSO -GP Gillis. For his performance writer-producer on the New York theater scene. But he "Sesame Street" originated playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim u.. 111....,11 ~o~e ~f ~~.~t ~a: was, he says, "sort ti a Uop.'' on the Children's Theater SL. Long Beach. Advance "Tht SttrH• Cuckoo" owners picked him as a "star ""6" is now showing in other parts cepted at the box offiec, (213) 'he. SHw ,...,. 7 P·• ., .. Menlo no,.. Aloi Altf• Mori .. Holley Ell~WltM• Yl11eeJ1t Cillfdnlo AUD 1''1.AYINCi ---- A yo1itt .... '°'" • MOtorllld odylMy ..-c• "Cllanges" -........ MkiMtoC..., ln i.;..i. school he had Workshop in New York but reservations are being ac-I of tomorrow." qualified for a summer job f the c-t. ht.• 5-. ,,._ I with the city Departm. ent "lr~·~~coun~:;:try~. =====~-~~;;:· ======~;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;-=:·-:;;:;~~~~;; But all that Is b<ltlnd him, says Dwayne Rickman, still Water and Power when the boyish Joo.king at 35. After Bob Cummings show offered 18 years as a movie and him a job. During the show's television actor he has turned 175 episodes, Hickman earned from show business to big an economics degree cum bus.iness. Iaude at Loyola Universitw of Los Angeles. Since mid-April he has been The Cummings show Jed to comirumications director fo~ 148 episodes as Dobie Gillis, Calbiocbem, a manufacturer followed by several movies. and developer ol. blochemJtals. Hickman, who lives in He represents management in suburban Sherman Oaks with dealings with em PI o Ye s • his wife and 6-year-old son, stockholders. says: "I like the organiz.ation "I'm excited about this of the life of a businessman. business," be s a Y s en· An actor's life is a strange thusiastically. ''Biochemistry life.'' is going to be big in the,:;::;::;::;::;::;====;:;,lf '70s." Ir why did ht leave .. o1iow '9AL90A business? 673 A•u9 "My decision wasn't based ....,.. on financial Coplj.derations: I ONN W83U't finding the fulfillment ':41 ,..,, .. _ of a career need. The current ...... Pnluula trend in movie making, with !':-------...;:;;:: its heavy emphasis on sex and violence, I find depress- ing. I don 't want any part of it." tte had turned down , he said, a film role in which he would have played a mar- ried man haVing an affair with an older woman. "And in teJeviaion I think hthllh'• °'"" C..ty Ortv.ln Sllewllll "ltll, • 1.-c• °"*"' 1•• C'tlw .... "lllM "" Hltll Wind" 101 Clltr 'A"IA ~~~ HARBOR BLVD r,i.:,vr 1N NOW-IND$ TUESDAY 9 Ac'ademy Nomin1tion1 JHll ~HOOi HOfl,.,I .-.. OO'••T THI l ~ -iit Color-St1rri11t- • Jane Fondil • Sus.1nn1 York • Gig Young Winntr lett Si.ipporting ~tor ..... "',.,..,,..y .... -N1tion1I lo1rd of Rovi1w- e h•·FIW Co·Hlt e All C'tllt lritw "'TM DMy DtPll" CciP') C.• ... ''Wtlwt he• Dt,... cot> ~ PACIFIC W ALK-IN THEATR ES .... Ctltr ...... "'lny ...... (aJ '· ... "lltf """""""' [I:) I The fashion revolution has worked down to the ground. Shoes ere news. Everyone 's buying more shoes-because of style. Not just women. Men, boys, girls and toddlers, too. The footwear business is on the march. "Because,'' Boot & Shoe Recorder says, "basic shoes are no longer enough-for any wardrobe."' During 1968, the average American family spent $100 plus on footwear-up from $68 just six years ago. Count the famllles who live In your area. Multiply by $100. If you want your share of that footwea r money, you've got to tell the fash ion footwear story. Out where people wlll see it. fflght on the pages of this news. paper. Your newspaper, Eight out of ten over-21 's read the paper each day. Seven out of ten teenagers do too. Even more to the point: a recent survey showed that seven out of ten Americans look forward to the ads In the papers-whlhi only one in four feels that way about ads on TV. No wonder retailers Invested more than $3 billion on newspaper advertising last year. No , 1 wonder the country's top shoe stores spend more than two percent of net sales on their ads in the papers. Yourr competitors know the power ohhat seven-syllable sales force: NewSpaperabillty. The footwear business has changed. And newspapers. have changed, too. With economical new nelghbor- hood"Q,d buye, 1uperb color reproduction, and new printing techniques. This change has brought a-substantial Increase ln local papers' ad volume. During June '69, dallies' retail ad ravenue Jumped 11 .3 per- cent over June '88. News- papers are working for retall. To paraphrase an old saying: If the medium tits, buy It. And no medium fits you better than your own local paper. That's what we mean by NowtPOporabl!Hy. THE mEDIUm THAT FITS · . FOOTWEAR. [ DAILY PllOT I ( I Ii \ " • I ' • . -. . --. . . ----------·------:-"7."";7.77-::-:-::"-::-.-::---:-"":'."".:--::'."-::':':':C-~-."!':':"'.~~~~...,..,....,..... ........ ~~~~,.,,..~·~--~ ~--, .. , ........ ··~ ...... _ ...................... , . . ...... ······· ~ ,., ~·\· .. ~ ... , ........ ~ ... ,, .. " .. ,,, • 0 •O 0 o 0 I o .. "~ .. ' Remember ••.• , . ' • __ • • · ff ~ou didn'.t buy at Dunlap• • • • ·You--Patd··Too Much! • • • BIG ECONOMY .•. ' ' . 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OPEN THURSDAY AND ·MONDAY EVENiNGS . AND FOR YOUR VIEWING OR PURCHASING HUNDREDS OF PAINTINGS, WOODCRAFT, PHOTOGRAPHY, FOLK ART; BATIK, CERAMICS, SCULPTURES, STITCHERY, DECAU· PAGE, SH.ELL DESIGNS, DOLLS, AND MORE ••. ON OUR . MALL FRIDAY, MAY 1 SATURDAY, MAY_:_ 2 10 AM TO 5 PM CARICATURE PORTRAITS . With Our Compliments By Noted Artist BARBARA DENNY -.,. -- .11 A.M. lo 5 P.M. Both Days I • -$. . .l _ ' . ... ' . ' ' ' . ' ' GIFTS •••. •. TO DELIGHT MOTHER ON HER DAY ••• -L -• -., " l • •'. " ... •• • ... ·: .. ... •• . .• r ! • • • • • • . ' ' ' • . • ' . ' ! j ' ! ! I ( 1( i I ! ( I f ' ~­ I · DETERMINAJION -Wilt Chamberlain of the • Lakers muscles his way between Dave DeBusschere (22) 1and •Cazzie Russell of the New York Knitls \ltfi.ile \Villi s Reed is see n in the background. The Knicks rarely led -except when it counted, at the end or the overtime. Their 111-108 triumph gives them .a 2-1 lead in the NBA playoff championship series. .. , ~ • Sports Clipped :SlitJtt ~ . ~i~l·Primed .fo·r Derby Ride .. " •' .. . lllSV\fµ:; Ky .-The larges! and Of th& •. competilive Kentucky -~lds·.ia nearly' two decades was ~•1'ted todq, but ,it was a 21-year~ld bkldfte from 'Old.mar, Fla. ,who stole the~adlines from the Stars. 1*arie Crump~ was on the , tttr19hhold of .becoming the first femate· Ttder .Jn ~ica 's premi~ horse race when traiier Don Divine dropped the naine of 'Fathom into the entry box along wltb 17 other 3-year~lds. Mjss Cnunp, who also hofdi · a flock o( qther firsts in the jockey bu1lneas, has~sald her Derby ride "WO{l'l be' any dl1Cere11t than the first time. I rode, Thei-e wcm_'t be any more criliclsm.'' IDcludcd in the field are Flbtitla Derby wlnoer 'My .Oad George.· Santa Anita Derby king Terlago. Cafifomia Derby vie* Geor~ 'Lewis and Blue Grass Stakes winner Dust ·Commander. Atlanta Stadiu1n In eight games this season. lie needs only rour runs batted in to join only 1 l others wilh 1.600 or more. • -toS ANGELES -The Dodgers have pdrehlsed the contract of first lfaseman· outllelder Gary Moore from their Spdtane team of the Pacific Coast League and optioned thlr"d b.stma!l Steve Carvey to Spokane, the Natiunal League club annolillced Wednesday.' ThougJl Moore, 25, had "*'1, 'ui\der contract' to, ~pokane he has been playing wJth the DOdgers' Texas LeallJe club at Albuquerque. . A rlght-.h8.n(led. batter, Moore.wa1 001- ting .370 in 11 games with Albuquerque and leading the Texas League with roor horile runs. thousand s. The ~way's steel and concrete stands circling the 2~~-mile track seat about 200,000. Another horde roams the vast infield. The Speedway and Indianapolis civic promoters are able to stretch out t~e Memorial Day event for a month becauae or the fattest purse in motor sports, more than $8001000, last yeu. -• !\1ANCllESTE R, England - Chelsea rallied for a tie in the v.·aniug n1inutes of regulation tlme and then scored in the extra 3fl.!minute period \Vedncsday lo defeat Leeds United %·1 nnd win the English Soccer Cup for the nrst time. A se llout ctowd Of 62,000 saw the boisterous, tou gh-tackling game al Old Trafford Stad ium . It was a rematch because the teams had tied 2-2 two weeks ago in overtime in London. Demoralizing As Any I • • ! Playoff · ·~er.av · lllOLIWOOD -b• \nlJh llMci !lldld l!ld ... ~ 1-1'* lil·-.le •In tbe lll•lll loltllil. elJllt ...... .. . -ilAtd. Gui ift . lhf Laker drlllbl, .... ~ lltdmll-iJ!ljii. • 00'1 • 1111 -...11 itiid· ...... w Ult Lllon 111111 ..... i ~ lll·lll .. llttldJI -Ii: 'llto 11 ... ctlllt amw -., .. 11•.••....t,..., 1an1 -·· iloltat ....... t.. _... -· 1n 111o -. P11ipt11, 1111a11, t.l 11111 ... itdioi1nii wltti in ... ~ iooln!liilt ob11'iiilo It 111 ,, ..... Iii •• ttjl., la ,.u..r ltll ~ u. ..... u ~ lrolll ,tbt j>lall. . llll "1IOI 1111 lo llllr II wll binlj lltldliili •. "th • ---Ii illlJ playoff defeat I,ve ever bad. They (New York) played a very good second half and we played a poor one. ''n>ey looked fresher than u1 the last half and in the overtime." Then he broke thought and repeated "oh, man!" two or three thpes. "They just aren't going to qWt." West's latter statement was in answer to a reporter's observation that lhc Knickl didn't have ~ alt taken out of their sails when his 55-foot desperation shot at the buuer sent the game to overtime. New York had trailed nearly the entire gBiIDe, 00ce down 'by as man)' as It I LOS AN•ELl!S . ' ' a1-;lor • H U lrlluon • 1·2 If CJllmllitt1•1n 1 1.u ,, Wttl 11 11.11 :w Otrrlft 4 l·I ll EVM ~ M 2 H.ll"kln J M ' Voes'· Accident Sparks Ang~I~ ' TC?. 3.2 Victonr NEW YCIRll (AP) -The hl~lid ~ .. play i! a calculated maheuv~r for California's Jim Frego!I, but teammate Bill Voss sometimes gels the same results by accktent. Hit-and-run singles by Fregoai and You set up the Angels' second and third runs Thursday and they fought off a At19 el Sle te A" ~ N KMJOC (Tii i ,t.gr. JO """e11 1t Nl'W Vor11: •:55 11.m. t.ts 11.m. 10:$5 1.m, 10:$5 1.m, 1:» p.11\, M•1 I Antlll 11 Bolton Mil' I Alll'lll ti Botton ~.,. ' AA;el1 11 aa11on Ml1 .f Af'lllll VI, WIPIJ111110n ninth lnnln& New York rally to nip the Yanket! 3-2. snapping a 7-game IOI! ~tring It Yankee Stadium. "I go with the elemeflts," said Fregosi, whose bouncer through the vacated shortstop hole In the !lxth inning put Jarvis Tatum in position to score from third on Alex Johnson's force play grounder, giving California a 2-0 lead. "They know you can hit the ball lo right field, so i11 that situ ation you pull it if you get the fastball.'' "I didn't think il was hit-and-run," said Voss of his pinch single to left in the eighth which sent Sandy Alomar from first lo third before Ken McMullen's single.I.delivered the deciding run. "I lllOught Alomar was just running on the pitch. and I really was trying to pull the ball to right. "Nobody can execute the hit-and-run like Frego!I. He hiL<t the ball to righl field so well that they look for him to go that way. But he's quick enou1h \\'ilh the bat to go the other way too and cro<ss them up." fl , C4Lll"O•NIA "'" T01tK •II' r llr91 ,,,,.,.. Ak)mlr, :lb l I l I Cltl'lcl , :lb J 0 0 0 J.T•tum, rf 3 l 1 0 Kmn..,, 3b • O O O V0$5, rt I O l 0 M11rctl') cf I O O I Fr'9051. '' • o 1 o w11111, 11 J 1 2, I McMullen, Jb l 1 I C~ltf, lb ' o t A.John$0n, .. • I • 1 lle11ry, rl • o t Spencer. lb • O o Munten, c J l I I E,_"· c • O l H1ntln, ,, 2 O 1 t R.9'1Clo d 3 0 l T1plffno, pl! I 0 I 0 Meuersm!lf!, p 2 o I cu,,,...11nc1, D 1 o o o A:ulr,pf! 10 t ~.1111 1000 0.111,p OOO!McO.nltl.p OOOO JahntlOM, 1111 l I I WINI, ah 1 o 0 I K.Tllvm, p 0 I I Tol1b :U I , C1llfllrnl• 1'1111' Ylrlt T.,ftl1 :a 2 1 2 l 010 001 010 -) 1111)001001 -J QP -C1lllomi. I. LOI -Clllflltn!1 '· NIJW Y0t~ I. 211 -lltl'tl:, lt1M1Hno. lll -C•llf. $8 -M11rt1r. S -Cillllbtrl1nl. SF -lltPOl, 11'"•11•1•10 MIHlflmllf! !W.l·tl l 5 1 I J ' OOylt 10101 l(f11um 1 I l I t C11mbt•4-l>d !l.1•11 f I 2 t · 1 1 ' McDanl•I t , , I I ., WP -C\11'1\bttltl\d, T!mt -2:2•. Attendtlitt -5.~. rDefeat-.We st Bearihalls, Fists Fly at Oakland BOSTON (AP) -The bad blood which has been brewing ror three years between Boston 's Sonny Siebert and the Oakl:&nd Athletics erupted into a couple of bean- ball incidents and a general · melee Wednesday night. The latest outbreak marred s~:s finest performance 0£ the current llUDn, but he still got credit for hi• ftnt victory of the year as the Red ..In fashioned a S-3 decision. In the Oak.land filth one of his pltchtl lliled in on Chuck Dobson and ticked off tbt Aililetics pitcher's bat as he due~ IWI)'. Siibert 1'U the second bitter in the bot<om al the llllb, and Dobson fired a pitch which htt him ID the tolt !boulder. Sonny started towald the motnld, and both dugouts empijed.r but order was restored before any tl~ttng broke odt. Then Jn the Oaklarld sixth Siebert's first pitch hit Reggie Jackaon on the arm and the action started. Jack.son started for the mound and was temporarily restrained by plate um- pire Bill Haller, but three players raced out from the Oak.land bench and knocked Siebert lo the ground. Both dugouts and pullpens emptied agajn, and this time there was somt fighting and a Jot of shoving and milling around. Thing! had jwt about quieted down when Jackson charged Siebert and wrestled him to the ground, and the t"'O of them rolled around again with others from both sides joining in. When order was finally rl!!tored, Siebert and Jackson were ejected as Vance to Pitch were A1t pitcher John Odom and Botton. t'Olch George Thomas. , SHlbert denied that he wu throwing at tho OQland hlttm. "111Jt hlpper!s In basebalj," be laid. "YOU pitch l\l)'s In and pitch guys out and once In a while the ball gets away. But l'd nevtr tey to hit a guy on purpole." Al for the lotlf 1Jandln1 feud, Sonny tlkl be wu trylng to pitch one of ~. b.'• hitters inside in 1117 and· hit hlm, then got hit by Dobson in the next inning. . He said there had been other incidents since then, and he tholliht Dobibn was throwing at hlm Wednesday night. "Yeh, t tholigh~ so from the way. he threw the 'ball," ~rmy said. · ''H.& was JOOking right at me. Mly~ he figured it ••• his turn if ht! playl that iame. l don 't plaf that-game." · Dobeoo. however, 11ttl ~ didn't thin Siebert had thrown at him, "nor wu I trying ttl hit hlm. If you try to hit a guy, you don't throw at bf! stomach." The Oakland pitcher said he thought the whOle Incident was "really blown up" beca~e of the tension the team is under due to its slow start in the bid for Ute American League's Western DITlsion cblmpi~shlp. "They were punclllng Siebett . when h@ wu dowrl1" the Red Sox coach said. 111 was kind of 11.1rprised to tee them punching so much. Usue\ly IUYS are j\lat yelling. This wu more physical th•h any baseball fight I have ever seen." Grabarkewitz Has Job --As Long As He Hits LOS ANGELES (AP) -In the 13 years the Dodgers have called Los Angeles their home, no less than 40 different players have occupied third base at one lime or another. Now 8111 Grabarkewitz has entered the revolving door saga. "As long as he hits he's our third baseman" manager Walter Al!lon sa~s Dodge r Slale "" ••"'" IMt K'I ( ... I ....... .10 ~Y 1 Dodgers v1 Montteu "" I Ocolkltrs ,... Man1rt1I MIY OodjMrs VI Monh'NI ''" o.m . 7:U 11.rn. 6:~ D . ..,. 12:.U o.m. ttillJ, and Grabarkewitz is doing just that. ...... Grabby, as he's called by hi!! team- mates, collected two more hlta Wed- nesday night as Los Anftl19 enttea a 1l1·game Philadelphia winning streak by bollncing the Phils, 6-1. It also halted th'e Dodgtti' thrte-game 101101 streak. Grabarkewitz now HAI the team &atUng 1ead at .J31, and he'll take it hito a fOllr.galne serlea with Montreal which opens tonllht al llod1er s!l<llum. Rookie Saody Vance, 0-1 OppoSe!I the Expos' Bill Stoneman, 1-3, In the series opener. "'l'hl thtnt• we've been lacking more than anyqilng Is hittl1'R:." Alston said. "Grabby handles himself real well around the bag and his speed is a big 1stel. But it's the bat that'a keeping him 111 thett." Grlbarkewlb started the ttason on the bench but g<1t his chanct when hl1 roommate, rookie of the yetr Ted Sl1<lll0ni, itljbred hla leg. Crabby took over at 11Cond add dill 1ueh a 1trona job th1t 1'htn Sb:lrDore retumtd Grabarkewit1 wU 1bllted to tbird and that'• where tie's been ever since. lit hi 011 baae four tltnts, with two stnllea and two walk!!, Wetllielday night. He drove in a run irid alBO scored Cltice. Andy, K-1upplled Ille P'l"lr 1'llh hi! third hbme rwl C1f the tttlon. -a h.,.o-run 1h0t In the filth when the Dodgecs ,..~nl batttrs to !be ~!ale. Claude 01 plckld ~P lbe witJ, fOllig the distalice or the iecOhd f.lmf in a row. He'• now won hit la1t two itms after losing three 1tralght to opin the seaMn. l'HILADI Lf.HIA LOI ANGll!Llt ~~: • •ii , .• , ~ ~:vJ'. t;. 'lb l ~ f1 ~~~, lb ~ ... !E~~ rf t l ~ ~ •NwM. ti .... .,, lit. i 1 1 • M.lt,Mi. c kll, t I 1 1 t .. .,.. " • lltrnore • I I ' • 0,Jld.tift, " 2 I bet11•lo.rn.a I 1 I ~.: ~ I t O.lltn, 11 ~ I I ' "al!M!', , • I I . ' f9tlk :ll 'i 1 TOia;~ '11 4 l'~lle<lfli:otoll 11• . -I U. ll!Nrlfl -• E. -Hlttt, Slitl'f!Gf? 1:r. r.., , DP -lM Anplh 3, LOI -II lldt ... 11 S. ·L ;Anottn IJ. 21 -W. 1'1rll1r. H -ll(lle!i Ul.~l -Mo11, • II• Ill. " Q. 1a . 10 O.J.cUon -,l.,·11 .. JI, .,.. • I , . L~• 2--llJ J 1 > > ... !mtr I f .21 OUttn (W,N! f I 2 J Hal" -ty Ostet~ lHll .. I. W" -G. JKlr;IDtl. ..II -k>di11;l1o. t lnw -''"· A~ -lo.711. ' • • • An.ANT A, Ga. -Two popular Chicago Cuti stars. Ernie Banll ohd BUly Wilbma, ·will ~ iihiofin1 for career p111p.... atlaibed ~y only a handful at Major Jeaaue player1 when . the Cubs ..,el a lour-pbl~~eekend ..,.1., •galnst Garvey, a rookie , hit only .087 in nine games with the Dodgers after a -brilliant "Spring. -. INO!ANllPOLJS , Ind. -Th< ln- 'dianapoUs MPtor Speedway will open Fritlay 1 fdr tile longest i>relimlnary In sports, alm011t fJJUr weeks or practlc-t and 'Ume trllla pointed It the 54th 500- rnilrracf Miy 30. Bass Retiring F~om Pro Football AUOnla lonlghJ. • • #¥llaml tan beCorhe only the tourih )la~~in hi.s&ocy-to perlonn in 11,000 atril&tt games merely by seeing aclioo tn tM ICriel opener. Banb, needs only two horn, runs to be<fr1o the nlnU1 player with 000 or molt tnd his chances appear good since JI -· already ha"' aa1l>d out of I ' •• ' Kighilfoti bL"1c month are the JG-mile qll1llf)IUfg Nu MIY 16, 17. 23 and 24 nnd the eliborate IM'JO fo'eslival parade Ma1 28. 1 The lrlala. wbJch wll\ cut 8~ entrie.s, at $1,000 a car, to 43 atarlt'rs. sometimes draw crowds in lhc hundreds of ( --------- t,OS ANGt-:LES (AP ) -Dick Bal!, lhc quick little fullback who set hos Ang~lcs Rom s rushing record!, an- nounced Wednesday he l! retiring from professional footbalJ. The 1110 pound University of the Pleine product rrom Vallejo, Calif., passed Dan Tow\er'a Ram aU-tlmt rushing record and holds the record wilh 5.4111 yartls Jn 10 sea1oas. li e also caught 204 passes for 1,814 ' addilional yarda. Bass saw rushlna action only In one play lasl season, &alnini a single yard as it became apparent he wa!n't in· eluded In the Los Angeles plaru;. Now he hopes to enter the e~ tertalnment buslneu and he has been successful a1 1 radio disc jockey, an avocation daUng from his collegiate days. "I'm considering job! In the en- tertainment business, but J don 't figure ' · on Cl*hlng a1 J Jrif~," Bau nkl. In announcinJ1 bla retlrtment from the Rami. . Coach O.Orge An!lt declal't!ll Dltk bad been a fine leader and player with the Ram1. And although the player in- dicated that at only S-10 and ltO he might hive trouble makln& a current college tearh, Allen said -there was no doubt thal Bas! would be a rqular beca""' ol his heart .00 dedication. ---_ L_ --• ~--------- Baas, who suffer.ct in Injury tllat prolm1od bl< <olleplle stuoo an extr• y~ar, w .. dratted NO. 1 It a "future" "7 lbe Ramt In J.,!11. He then -lllo first NCAA col-l~alt trlpJe cnnnt wlnner since ~ "Wbluer" While the cuntnl Suprer4o Court Jl!'lloe, wJ tt In 1'11. Bass iiuMd for J,361 yards, ICOl'<ld Ill )IOlnla 1qd had 1,440 yards total ofrense for lU 1158 seuon. ~ . I • ' ~ ---""';"""'__,,.....,,.-~-.. . ------------ Poinona Rally In 9t~ Drops · . UCI, 11 -10 Pomona Olllege rallled ... for four runs In the last of the ninth iMing to hand UC Irvine a 11-10 setback in baseball act.ioo on the winners' diamond Wed- nesday. The sudden I~ snapped UCl's eight- game win streak and ran the Anteaters' season record to 28-9-2. . TtJ,ree ~f the runs in the Pomona nmth came after two outs. t\ pair or one-out doubles. got the first run In, but UCI looked like it was out of it when it then got the second out. But J a single got one run home and 11 ,two.run homer by Pomona leftfielder Ppte Woodruff , did the rest of the damage. The Anteaters enjoyed an 8--0 lead .R.t orie time and had a 10-3 advantage going into the home half of the seventh when Pomona scored four times. Rocky Craig and Dennis Nicholson both blast.ed two-run homers. Nicholson's came in the second and Cr8ig hit his In the fourth. Criig also had ·a two-run triple in the fifth. UCJ~rst baseman Tom Spence, who went llllo the game with seven hits In his last sevea appearances, banged out two singles in six trips. ' Coach. Gary . Adams', club returns to. action Saturday. meeting UC San Diego in a doubleheader on the latter team's diamond. The first game gets under Way at noon. UC IRYINt: fltl -l"OMONA 1111 SP'.ans1;1{,o 11 Svkore, lb Cr1"1J, cf F1rr1r, cl S!Mflc1, ·\b P1eu1rd. rf K,lllMll." Greenw1y, 2tl flillderlOl'I. c Nidlo!IOll. p Wetlllr. P Docld· p • O'COl'ner, p Tol1l1 UC: Irvin• f'ornon1 '" ' ~ rtll 4 I 0 0 ' 1 2 a 3 1 2 ' 1 0 0 0 ' l 2 0 j 0 3 2 4 1 2 D I I I G ' 1 0 0 I I I 2 1 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 o O D D ·~ { .. 1111 8errwlt, 11 • I I O M•l•ne, 11 l I 1 1 Joos1, ?b l I 1 I Sonne, p.Jb S 2 1 I Edlls, rf S I I I H;i~"',lb Sl27 W<IOOtlltf, lb 5 7 2 J L1r1,t 1010 l lnd1ev. C·P l l I • MtC1ll, t ' 1 1 O Jf 10 ll I Tot1 ls Sc•,.. "' lnnln•• 3'11H t . " ' lll0-10 13 • 611 lll .... , 41)o!....11 ,, ' • •• --~ ----~ --.. ----,---,---......---. • • --------~~ ... On Stale All-stars, • Broderick. Lost By ROGER CAIU.801'! JM .. Dll .. ,. ....... One man's·dessert b another'• polton . That's the siluaUon for coach Don Leavey of_ Westminster llllb loliw'lng !ht disclowre lhat his lirll leam All.CIF buketbaU star. Dan Broderick· has been selected for duty in the f1nt annual Norlh.SOOlh state tr'1> aJl.Bllr gal"" at ; Oakland July I. · ·' Leavey, coach ol 1tbe South contingent for the .oran&e· County NGttb.soutb game June 2'1, lhus ~-denied Ille }'< of his outstanding M center • NCAA rules mandate that all ~peU­ tors must have 1J da)ts of. practice prior -.. to competing in al1"star attain. Broderick has been seleCted u one of four postmen in CNCh Howie tyon'i -. double-post offense that features a double-mid poet wilh lar1'an!• termed- wings and guards called,quarterbacts. Leavey says, however, his SOOth team's chances haven't been aa badlY damaged as it apPears to be ~n the surface. "Thi&. mean.s we'll concentrate a little less on a post offenae. Mark Dekker (of Santiago High) can shoot remarkably well from outside despite his size (6-9) and it opens up other possibilities," says Leavey. "I expect Broderick to play a split pmt In olir system,•• says Lyon of CIF Southern Section champion Millikan. 111 want to use Broderick tin a ro ta tint system at either post with Dave (Frost) and (Bill) lngraril. With all three able to perform at either po5l It will give us added strength," says Lyon. Lyon's offense at the post area includes one post . man clo.5e to the· key . while' the other sets. blocks and rolls to the bucket on• the block and r.oll system. "We have only 10 guys so I'd assume be (Broderick) will be. seeing plenty -of action~ adds-Lyon. Broderick was the lone player from Orange County to ma~e the ~earn - a unit ·showing good overall balance in the height department but sorely Jack·' PAN BRODERICK . . . ·'· .· . ... .,·:: ·t I know those Northern . Calttorni~ 1"9• are reaUy tiJI, they leap· well _lld _tbfY. are fast-break .oriented. :.' "We fast-break of course. in Sou~ . . ., . -. . .. ,. California,. but, not ,quit~ llke tl}e~ wb011 area up there ·in · IUch a ·frenzied fiat· break, .. 9Urrls up Lea~~y. ·' The ~th conting~nt : w:tll wort cilt 12 days.prior to the test at San.FranClsto State college. . . Two of Broderick's mai n assets· h'ai been his ability lo •lain 'u.e· upperb,lnd in positioning for rebounds and bis ti• ' ,. cellent timing ability. . .1 Saddlehack 's Pennington All-circuit FINAL CHECK -Orange Coast College swim coach Jack Fullerton and secretary Shari H~hm~n .pro-. gram last minute entries into a Compu'ler for state jaycee swimming and diving.champiOnshipS DO\" un- derway at OCC. Over 2,000 hours of programming have been logged in the.c9mputer. . ing the "big'man". " Among the missing are Helix High's Bill Walton (6-11). along 'With standouts Greg Lee' of Reseda and Vince .Carson of Muir. oihu post players .. fof Ly0n ineiiile Ff<l:Sl . o( Millikan, Ingram of Mor.n- 1Jngside, ind g..7· Cla~ Bro·wn °''&An Diego Llilcoln, the tallest player ' oa 9e IO.man team. ·: · Playlna forward .:.... tir Y{ing · aa Lyi)n likes Jo term it -are Keith W'llket ot Santa· Barbara, ·Mare Palmer .ol Crescen~· Vallii. 9lenn .!d~Do!\Old ·<>I Los Angeles Jefferson aod Loyola's .'fam O'Mat:a. , ;. ,.Pitcher. Greg Pennington o( Saddle back College has been named to th.e Desert Conference baseball first team, selected 1tf. the conference coaches. Pennington, a 60phomore, has compiled a~ ·~1 circuit record and Is -slated to pif,ch Saturday against Palo Verde in C~mputer Runs Swim Meet. Walton was not available ror duty . while Lee was graduated at mid-year. Carson has not recovered from an opera· tion and was not Considered. Broderick represents·the second talle~ man on the Rebel squad. Broderick was named most valuable player in Orange Couilty <ind' averaged 24.3 points per jame -~~ hauled J!L 616 rebounds in 30 games. The 'Wings rival the postmen in lfefjil With no one under 6-S. . ; Two plBymaking guards compriSe 11fJ1 Blythe. · : Outfielder Scott Longnecker, catcher Steve Smith and third baseman Mike Edwards all landed second team berths for Saddleback. Longnecker has a robust .397 average going into the final weekend of con- ference action. Smith, sidelined for the season with an injury. finished with a .280 mark and Edwards has a 320 mark. Longnecker and Edwards are sophomores while Smltlf' is a•freshman. ' Mt. San Jacinto third baseman David Cripe was named the most valuable player in the conference. Honorable mention hOnors went to Sa(l- dleback players BruCe BOyle. fuck Nelson and Eric Christensen. ALL·DESERT COH l'I RI NCIE Fi.-.t T••"' l)pi':....1!111" Vic10r V1llty OF,.-Ulllblrl 111rstow Ol"-H0y1 lmPWlal v1111v 11>-V-y _ Mlrl Cost• :tl>-~wrrl Ml, SI" J1cl"10 --OofTljroq\Miz S..!$IOW ftS-ConrMI Victor V•nev 't.--McCar-1t Ml. Sin J•cln!a ~P-llllillOll 51ddlflleck P-T1rr Oeserf MVP~Yld Cripe (Ml. S1n J•clnlal I~ Te1m "'''" Mira CMll ._,.,_. Ml. 51~ Jtd"IO Ila rs to .. SadclleDldl: ""'" -·-Mt. s.n J1c1n1a lm~lll Vllkl'f .~ Sa. . m .>~ ·'" .l 11 ••• ·"' .•10 " .. , "· "· "'· "'· "'· ,, "'· "'· . ''· .JOI So. .J6J So . :m SQ. .1'$ Fr. .J60 Fr. .310 So. .lll Sci. .2et Fr. 4-l Fr. S.2 So, By CRAIG SHEFF Of ""' Olll'I' Pllol Sl•fl A couple or years ago if someone sal a sWim meet is bei"g run by a computer, you would have thought he was off his rocker. But such is the case al the state junior. college swimming · and diving championships, now under way through Sc.tlirJ::iy at Orange Coast College. The computer tits official "ame is an, IBM 360 sy,stems 40 computer) is called the judge by ocC• swim coach Jack Fullerton and his student assistants. '(he idea to experiment with the judge came last year at tQis time. Fullerton aad soffle of hiS aides were drivil}g J>ack from the 1969 state ·meet al De Anza College, near San Jose, and the discussion centered around how slow the meet weal, as far as figuring out entries and results was concerned . How could the 1970 meet be improved . Someone me11tloned the computer and the wheels began to churn. Upon his return, Fullerton got in touch with Jack King, then the director of district data processb1g, and the two started ptannlng early. Fullerton went to work lcar"ing everything he could~8bout the computer, getting advice from district programers Wil Marshan and Dave Clemons. Then the OCC coach passed on wbat be knew . • Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE Eul Divlsio• East Dtvilion W L Pct. GB W L Pct. 13 5 .722 12 5 .706 GB Chicago IJ 4 .765 11 8 .579 9 7 .56.1 11) 9 .526 9 9 .500 5 12 .294 1 Pittsburgh ~ St. Louis i Philadel~~ia New York ·~ Montreal West Division • Cincinnati .~an Francisco Dodgers Atlanta 16 6 .727 10 I I .476 9 10 .474 9 11 .450 7 14 .333 7 14 .333 ··1 ~n Diego -·~Houston w.-... .... lttllllh C"lc-10. Plttsbur911 5 Sin Olt!IO TO. MOnlrttt O $1n Fr111c:f!IC& I, Ntw Yort ' DOtl9tn '· Pnlltdelphlt 1 •n""'• 10. St. l.cl.lls • Cl!lc:IMlll S. lfollslll<I l TMlr'I G-HOllllon CDll!rkt r l •!I 1t SI. LD1,ul (C11l~I011 1·1), ....,,_ ChltffO (Jenklrll 1-'4: II Alltnl• (Stont 2.11. .,,,,,. ,, .. \. Montl'NI ($..,,_ 1•3' II ·~ (YI~ 0-1¥' fli9hl NtW Yerll (lty... l·ll " 1111 FrlllCiKll r~ COrmkk 1-n I • QrllY '""" ttMduled. <> ,,....,. .. o-11 S HollilOIL ti SI, lOlllt, "19M ,_ C1'1Cl90 11 Alllllll ,n)thl .,. , ; I " Plllllluf'th ti C11>e!Mtl~ nl9nt Monlre11 '' OMtert. "lfllt Hew Yort •I Stll Dlt9o, n"1111'1 Phlla(MIPl'lll ti Sin Fr....clsco. lllf"I Baltimort Detroit Boston \Vashiogton Cleveland New York JO 8 .556 JO 8 .556 7 10 .412 I 12 .400 Ange ls T\-1-innesota Oakland Chicago Kansas City Milwaukee West Division 13 ' It ' 8 1l 6 I! ' J2 5 14 Wedtllll'lll Y'\ ft-IR 811!1mort 1', Chit"° 1 Ml11n"°1~ 1, c1evel11ld t ~lrol! I, K1nst1 Cit¥ J A"'tll J, l+e .. Yori< 2 8o•!1111 s. 011t!1nd , W11h!1111!on ~. Mllw111~e1 e T•'l"10- .684 .647 .421 .333 .Jl1 .26.1 I\ ' 3 "" 6 Delrolt ILoiich .. 21 11 Ken111 C!IY ll~llt!' ).!), """' . Clllvtl"'8 CH1r41n,1-~J II MlnnfMl'll (Tllnl ,U) n11"'°" ~M 1.01 et airc...o~(John Hl ~llWl:i!tM lllolln •H 11 W1Jlli...,!Ofl (ln.llltt ~3), ni.'11 • OelOt..lf! tOllo!ol f.JJ at los!on (Ptlers 1·1) • ~·'""'• 0-1 • Clt'llllflll 11 klfltef (11\1, "ltht Oetrall ti Chl<lllO. "Ith! Mln-11 11 ll•lllmon!. 111thl ONlellCI 11 Wetl'll"'loll. "1111' Mllwlu!CN 11 N-Yorlt. 111tnt A111tll 11 aotton, "ilhl 1966 HARBOR ILVD., ·COSTA ME~A 646-9303 Service and P1rtt -for All Imported C1rs- Mode rn Body Shop for All C1rt Orange County's 1'.argest and MosL Modern Toyota and yolvo Dealer to secre'tary Shari Hochman. Since that ti'me, over 2,000 hour1' of programb1g for the slate meet have gone into the computer. Entries for each day's events are received at 8 the previous t1ight and, accordihg to Fullerton, seeding for the day (via the computer) can be completed in just 30 minutes. ''Last year (at the state meell it was dOl)e manually and lhey were work- ing 0111 it til 2 or 3 In the morning each time ," says the OCC coach. Results too are instant, following each event. If the work is done manually, it could take hours· to have the Unal results tallied, be adds. Human errors are the only detractors in the process. "Typing errors, a card not being rilled out correctly and errors on judges' cards ca11, of-course, cause inaccuracy." The computer termhial is hooked Into the main computer by telephone, using a data phone . During 'the state meet tonight, Friday and Saturday, three terminals will be used, two at the OCC pool and oue at Costa· Mesa High for tile diving com- petiton, '. AnOther terminal Is set up l" case one of the other two malfW1ctions. But DEAN LEWIS APllL SPICIA'LS OO~IYl~rrJ[A][ COROLLA .1970 ,.$1853 +1.,.u,. AK 0..... MMtls I• Stock Mm) ll-Hll1a PJU1,-. L..41 c......... c.,. .. 1970 DEMO ,SAVE $570 1•2 2 dr., rtdle, he1!1r, 4•tp11tl. lS1r. ••7'401 USID CA 14'I CIA L Jfff TOYOTA C.,.llt Cpt. lt!ldlo, """'· .......... "°1<1, IXIH ... ! S12H that has not happened · yet, and is not likely to occur. A voluntary crew of about· 75 studenls helps Fullerton with the meet, doing just about everything from selling prO:- grams to judging and timing ·events. Fullerton credits eight i11dividuaJs with helping·hhn with most of the work. "We have what I ca ll the fantastic five lhal have really put in the hours to make the meet a success. They 'have really been tremendous. The five include Miss Hochman, Raylene Hess. Donna Ashton, Debbie Wilson and Judi'Harmoft. Fullerton adds that Paul Tbbetso11. Randy King and · Jack Barton have equally been of great assistance. TENNIS His Westminster coach fee.ls he'll be In tough again.st his Northern coun- terparts. ''He's really( gping to be cballenged. fl fl fl South Team Name, School Position . Frost, Millikan Post Ingram, Morningside Post Broderick, Westminster Post Brown, SO Lincoln Post Wilkes, Santa Barbara Wing McDonald, LA Jeflenon Wing O'Mara, Loyola Wing Palmer, Crescenta Valley Wing Kay, Pacific Guard Armstrong •. Righetti Guard Hel1bt 6-5 6-5 6-6 6-7 H H ... , .. , 6·2 6--0 · f:ialance of the squad · with ft:iPttl'• ~e-Armsttong .amt PacUic11 Sc&t Kay filling t.he bi~I . .Calendar ~'""" . 811111111 -S1n11 tJt&'' M•rfn1, M!ulD!I vi.;io " fusll"\ Co•,o;erwiA•1 1r •f CoeM Mn1, Lo.r~ ii il1nc1 .N H I Wll I , t II 19UM &etch, $1" !1tmente 11 r~!rf. = .. 11 . tt1.m1111111Cin l!lttcll. F?,11teln \11Uev It' utot11 AM V1111v, Edl11111 •I l111JOUI Ml'ltr 0.1 •t SI. Anlhlllly 1111 ti J:1S , RIO j.\anllO tt G9lfllli . Well C2:JOJ. G1mn1111t1 -Mllllkln 1t W11!flll111l1r Trltlt -Oetrt Conftr1nc1 lll'lllms ti Victef' ~ V1llfY' ~lhern C.111. to1119renc. ,,_, 11 GoliHIW W~li -NewPDrt H1rbor tt W•imlnsm, w.19~ 1\ !;\Un1~ton 8~1cl\, S.llt'J..,-"'"L,~t Mer/'Jt i:,11 :: ~dtn {;~'r lbo~1it 11)~ !, ' LA er f ~wlrnml1111 -Sltlf> JC ,n\fft tt Or111111 Co-.. c9r'~'.:I, oo_•·"'c:~1~ Mnt 11 Coront d\W"'" L1011111 lle1cll 11 ore~e, .W11lrrd,.ter 11 twPO~ f1111101, Hunlln1tlOll 1ti;!i ill W•ftrn, OOlh I ti Sen Cl'"'~"''• AA.fr Ill II S111t1 An1, ~~'" tt EdllO!I· 1lall(;!I ,, LOI~· i.u ·1 J:' • 511' Fern&dnri v111w Sl•le 11 UC lrvlf!C fl, C1lllornl1 Cpnf11rtne1 ·1o11tn1v tr .•ua Hondo. • Wiison I lle!t Grode l $119 Tennis Balls. tL1..ii1 2 Con•I c.11 • '.~~-:1~::~~~~si;.~~ ....... $695 • DAVIS IMPERIAL DELUXE PDMES Reg. $25.00 ...............• ONLY $17 .00 • CENTURIAN·MAGNESIUM TINNll nAMH .... $49.95 ..••••.••••.•••••• SALi $29.tS GOLF •PRO AWARD SOLID CORE GOLF BALLS REG. $9.95 ONLY $3.49 DOZEN • BROOKS GOlf SHOES REG. $16.95, $11-.95 • GOlf BALLS (SLIGHT USE) TOP GRADE, 50c EACH SPORT SHOES FOOTULL IAlllALL--TRACK (So-Ano Only) OOOS & ENDS •..•...............•....... fr,.. 99c jot. 1111 "'k•I'"" Shet1, Reg. $7.9S ............ SAlf SS.II SKI SALE CONTINUES FISHING • FISHING LINE Y1 OFF UST PRICES • ROOS-SAVI UP TO ID% • PAUTZKI SAiMON EGGS G'"" L11Mt Rtt. $1.50 SALi 99c •ANY LURl-YoUI CHOKI 20~. OFF • RHLS-SAVI UP TO 30% • FLOTATION JACKITS-l•o .. llki ;,.; 1,.m jtckth, but kttp1 you affolt. lft. $J4.50-llOW ONLY $19.tS GUNS \ .. : RIFLES •SHOTGUNS-One of a kind, Floor Model-II reduced for quick clearance SAVI 40 Ol ON RIMINOTON-llUOll- UP TO /0 WINCllllTU-SAVA!H AIM ,l1tolt ., a.n114etil, 1H ullNr ...... $60.00 MOYf $49.t S DIVE~SWIM NlVIR llPORI, NMR AGAIN 0. ~.•• AT THUi LOW PRICIS ~· • Sl'ORTWATl-WATIRLUNO llNS · ., .. • VOIT ''DUCK RIT'' SWIM llNI (II...,.) 1.,.11us $7!! SCUIA DIVING Cl.ASSES ~w sr~rJN• a,.,..,,,._ . '"' ,,..... ....... ~. • , ... L.A. c • .,...., C.rtlftntl111 • 0'"'9 .... IMc .. , ... ,., ..... ~lrMf . , ........... ....,. """""-' •b,_. ........ ..,, SANTA ANA-219 E.41h ST.-Kl 7·5723 #27 FASHION ISLAND-NEWPORT CENTER-644-2121 FUllERTON-601 S. EUCllD-e71·SMI PflH Rff'ORT-l 7·2145 • .,• . ··-' :•' ,• .• •• • • . .. • I I I . 1 I J ) ' - •• llAllV PllOf -~ina • jSpikers ~ r nnw· ~ . .ID t( ... :~ Southland ' ::. Trout Plant ••• ::: ORANGE -Trabuoo Creek. :·.RIVERSIDE -Fulmer :;i.ue, e....i Lake. :::: LOS ANGELES -Arroyo ::.'leoo Creek, Legg Lakes (Mid-::ifie and South), Little Rock :,."'treek, Little Rock Reservoir, ;;:hddingstone Reservoir, San abriel River East, North and . :West Forks. t:~: SAN BERNARDINO -Big ,~ear Lake, Cu~a Creek, ;::Green Valley Lake, Gregory ~: .t,.n,. Lyde Creek Middle and E~)'oc.tti'Forb, Ml11 Creek, San Creek, Santa Ana 't South Fork Santa Ana 1(.fU-· ';:; SAN.DIEGO -Doane Lake, :;:,.., Luis Rey Rivor. ':::SANTA.BARBARA-Davey ·::!lrown Creek, Manzana Creek, • ::Santa Ynez Rivtr from Los :;·pnetos Ranger station up to :; ; """""'1 cmsin(. .... ' . ,,.~VENTURA -Mattlija ; ',Creek, Piru Creek upper sec- '"lion, Piru. Lake, Reyes Creek, ,. Rose Valley Lakes , Santa .. : .. Paula Creek. Sespe Creek ut>- ::"1t'r and lower sections, Ven- :: 'lura River North Fork. Vanity Bay Club Defeated NtwHrt Karblr 12') {I) AMh•iftl Mltltir (N} i.t ,_., Zlmmtr,...11-(N) !IHI l-l. ...,..l cM1 ._., 6>0. Defending national liUist Sunday for the Nationals ln M11tr' N)-«I. Ktn1 c i -M . Chart House of San Diego Honolulu, are Don Alstrom , Trvbo 1"1 won •-t. de!eated Balboa Bay Club in Will Gribenow, Jack Janssen, ""-°1"' 1YJ17tlJ WKl«n the best S.Of-5 matches Tues· Dick Montgomery, Tom Ryan, AbtlieY tM1 1o11 u . day nigbt in a men's volleyball Al Scates. Brent Stone and ~~r .. 'l'';l, ":.to. exhibition al Corona de! Mar coach Jim Keane. ~=~in"'i:)'!in u. JtJgti. Prior to next '\•eek's na· 1uo !Ml ....,, u. Jn a preliminary. Ora nge lionals in Hawaii, the club E11111c1i 1:a, 01 LN•• Coast College.bumped off San-will compete in the National Geo•t• tEJ II a.i. G1ww1v ILJ la Ana, AAU competition Friday night 7 '1t!:er1son IEI n def. Wright ll.) Members or the Balboa Bay in Santa Fe Springs and Satur-7\;; 1L1 7il de!. Sctiui~ 1e.1 n, Club team, which will leave day at El Camino College. '" 1 1iv1n IE) 7S. Ml. Pe1e•1 IL.I ?1, --,--,---:c:;==================-._,, ,. Kni_..t !El 71, ael, Wet.ti Ill n. .... Hill tE) n, Oii, GV«I-4LI 17, 5-f. S•11 C""'ltl'-U"I 100 Or:.,.._ OIMll t51 8' IMI. F• COJ ''· Joh11>n11 !$1 ,. de!, ..... " (0) •• llrMl"ll ISi 1't clef. IUrllltlld 101 ~lllWtot fSl IO del. Smllll IOl t i . M19"""' ($) to """· Wnner (0) "· I[....,. 011 Ill Matllltlll Jlllnlm IMJ, II 6'1. 9otte {El. 17~~ IMJ,_ fl. def. ktwifleld lE >. '5, J..O 1(~111111 IE), J't, clrt, :;lf,fr IM\, ts. 5-0 C1nlr11I !E), ... dt'I. RO<lne1 !Ml, NW;j;,h. IEJ, t l. Ml, Othl,lrom !Ml, tl~I~ (f), t•, 'llet. Ml-(M], "· ... ADOl'TION GUILD CHARITY .. ~ • • ' ' • ' • ~ • TE NNIS TOURNAMENT I MAY 30, 31 JUNE 6, 1 MEN'S, WOMEN'S AND MIXED DOUBLES INTitlB CLOSI MAT 11 COlllaet Your Tennis Club, Sportl119 Goods Store or • • • Ceil 675-7323 I Ii GOODWR4 ~~ers 2131 Sen Joaquin Hills Rd.,-Newport Center 64~5· • ~~~==~=========-11----------------------- ·--------------------- ) 21 . High Schools .for. Tmtin, ' \ . 52,0QU .Students by 2,000 Tho '"'jected .-ti> of' the 'l\!llln UDlll!'f' School Dialrlcl In the -:IO yNl'I II Ml• ierJni. It bu -••"'ll•'ecl 11111, lhe dlllrict ... w have SI,• JlreP -by lhe year IGOO .•• wblch means aboul 11 blsb octioola. · It l1gura out lo l\fO lo -...... acbooll every five Years. Nm on lhe qenda II acbool No. I •I El T ... Road tlW' Lelautt Wirkl. *' * ROGER CARLSON .. ___..-...-_. * ........ " . . . the Sa1oa1 are liekll.n1 a """PJDe ect1e over Estancia -Ute oalflt die dope Ueet fipttd to give Loara the most troable from the 0r .. u1e·Cout area. Tbe Ar]lrlt< bere 11 FiuW. Vllley, whlcll was picked to fhdala tut. Coacll Jolla Cole's Barons bave apparently feud Ute rtgbt corn. blaltlon ....: In .tile lltWn1 and fleltllng d~part· ment -ud are two games behind E1tancl1 In the race for a CIF playeff berth. Mlulon Viejo WU tabbed IA the ~tview loop and tile Dlabl• Re ltUil( tile pace wl~ u I-! mark', alOlll w:ltll San Clemente. San Clemente wu plcbd foarth -bat has 1bown good overall bllance la l<11lng only twice. 0ae game Rplratff the five contendtn with Westen, Marla.a allll Wettmlnster Illar· ln1 Ute Jou collllllll lead with three setbacb apiece. * * Santa Ana klgll's tennis teams ha~ had remarkable success in the CIF Bee and Cee tennis tourneys, gaining second place in eith- er Bee or Cee no less than rtine times since 1957. Three times the Bees won the cllampion· ship. Yet the Saints have oever won the varsity te&1m title. Three times they've been in the varalty flnall in that span, losing by lopsided margins o! 131>-i\O, :zu and 2$-3. * * * A tesU.moalal dlmier for Joe O'Hara, for- mer adlleuc director at fttater Del mp School for tbe past 11 years, will be bdd ai Sula Ana EIJu Club May Z7. O'Hara left the 1.tonarch lnsUtuUoa to .,. alst Dick c_, •• Cal State (Fullerton). lntemled parties lhOllld ... tact Lyle Roy (SU-0538) fOI' fw1ber llllormaUon. * * * Newport Harbor's undefeated CIF wrest- ling cbamplon Chris Hocpel bas been elected to prep All:American status ... a team com- posed of 24 wrestlers from throughout the na- tion. Uorpel won all 3' matches -S4 by fall!. He was the CIF Southern Secilon wnsUer ol the year. Horpel has signed a letter of intent to Stan· ford University. * * * !'ltl1Sion Viejo High School will add wattr poJo, tennl1 and wrestllnc to 118 athlettc agenda. Lack of teAChing openings, however • has dellyed selection of coaches for ihe sports. * * * Doc Sooter, coach at Covina High for the past 23 yeani, has been named Distrid 8 coach of the year by the National High School Athletic Coaches Association. . The district comprises California, Washing- ton, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, ldaho, Montana, New Mexico, Hawaii and Alaska. Sooter's record over the years at Covina ls an Impressive 498 wins against 135 losses and is in line :or possible national honors. Aggies to Run in LA Texas A&M 's torrid relay teams Jed by brothers Curtis and Marvin J\fills will get their sternest tests of the season June 6 aL the Coliseum for thf! Complon Invitational. In the 44G-yarder, where the Mills brothers are joined by Scott Hendricks and 9.S sprint· er Rocky Woods, the Aggies lead the nation v.·ith a best time of 39.7. The three next best teams -USC (39.8), Cal (39.9) and UCLA (39.9) are to oypose the Texans. Just last week the Aggies set the world standard in the 880 relay with a blistering l :21.7 clocking at the Drake Relays, with CurtiJ anchoring the baton quartet. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Cage, Hockey 91l1111kll Plnflh ... l"llllh WMftn611'I •-1h New Yorlr. 111, LO$ AllHMS 10&, IMl!r· l1m1, N1., Yortl ~1d1 bl1t.(lf·7 writ• "' TMllY'I Gam11 No 11m1• KnedultO FrlOIY'I Gunt1 N-Yorlr. 11 LOI Anteltl ... '#1<11-tV'S •tMllll E11l1r11 Dlvlti.11 kmlflnlb Kenlucl<y 11t , M-Yori! 101, ti/Ck~ win• ~t-ol·1 .. r1t1 4-) Tod11'1 G1m11 '#111-Olvl1lfll Fl1111J ... Los An!l~lts 11 Denver. llr1I 11mt In blll.(11·1 •eri.s l"riclt'f"I 0.mH l!nlt"' OIYlllolt 1"111.111 l(..,tuctv 1t 1ndl1n1, llral 11me In bctt-ot-1 1trlt1 Hodlty l"llVlfh N1lltin1I Ltl ..... Wet111HC11y'1 •nirlh No lltnel Kht<lulld T1411'1 G1m11 Wnl DIYISI ... Fl11o1!• $!, Louil II Pltllbtlrth, IUdl bul.of·1 HTIH J..7 FrilllH'I Gamtl No hm11 ~led Tennis Dresses $13.95 to $26.95 Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts-$4.95 to $12.95 Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts-$4.95 to $8.00 Mens Tennis Shoes Converse-$7.75 Jack Purcells-$8.95 Cresijn Sweaters-long Sleeve $4.95 Cresijn Sweaters-Short Sleeve $3.95 Laguna Shirts & Swim Trunks Baseball Warmup lackets-$5.95·$6.95 Baseball Caps-$1.25-$2.50 Baseball Undershirts-$1.85 & $2.25 Baseball Mitts-$5.95 to $39.95 Baseballs-95c to $2.95 Baseball Shoes Little League-$4.95 Baseball Shoes-$9.95-$15.95-$19.95 Ladies Converse Tennis Shoes-$7.25 Windjammers-$7.95 Dunlop Fort Tennis Frames-$14.95 Kramer Autograph Frames-~.95 T2000 Street Rackets-Nylon $39.95 Pennsylvania Xtra jlufy Tennis Balls While-$7.50 Doz. Yellow-$7:95 Doz. Wilson Xtra Duty Tennis Balls-$8.35 Doz. Tennis Carry All--$9.95 Back Packs-Sleeping Bags Dried Foods-Sierra Cups • Champion HandbaD Gloves Ace Bi Seamless Handballs Sam Snead Blue Ridge Starter Se.I 3·5-7·9·Putter 1 & 3 Woods-$58.00 Duck feet Fins·Blemish-$6.95 Bikes-¥arts-Tires-Tubes Op.n 9 to 6 \ . ' Closed Sundays " .. ~ ·----.....,~...,....---.----------------~---.,-....---·---·-----·-· ... -·- , . ~ike Notables Coast Area Duo l CIF Elite Only a pair of Ora"!''-"l""' · McH.ii.i. ••lclllol" ,.~ .•• , (oi;*, ,.;ltremont area names remain o Den$0n, S•nt• A1111 v11i..,. CIF list of prep track1,.iQ-~lnsrntn, surw1-, Hm1 I• LOW HU•DLaS field bests in the last week ~. Sant• A1111 v1111-, Hill, Mornl11Mlde before league preliminaries McA1t1i.r, 111a1r lifndrldi, MonllnNlde 11.1 11.1 19.0 lf.O lf.2 begin. c..,, c1,,_1 Laguna's Dave Hustwick, Compton 441 •eu.v who has had one of the best ~:~::n~.~ 880 marks in the section since =ntu.z the early weeks of the season, Pol.,. remains in fourth place with MILIE •Et.AY Mornl"'i.1<11 Clf'llUVllll his l :M.3 clocking. The leader is still MOrningside junior Percell Keeling wltb a 1:52.8. The only other area aUllete among tbe ClF pacesetters is discus thrower Skip Rimer of Corona del Mar. 'lbe 6-2, l~lb. Sea King ace has chUcked the platter 161-0'1\ for firth in the section. Defending CIF champion Jim McDonough of Monte Vista Is the CIF leader at 178-11. Newest sectional leader is Ron Johnson of West Tor· ranee, who blazed to a. 4:14.6 mile mark in a dual meet last week. Johnson's performance puts him ooly eigtit tenths behind an Ohio prep who leads the nation in the four·lapper. · ~fost of the league finals around the section start oe1't week with just two exceptions. The Coast League finals get under way at Compton and the Foothill loop meet is at Glendale Friday. (II' HOllOI' Atll '" ICJrlt, Oomlng..er '·' •• ••• t.6 ' ••• .., .., .., .., lllalr ... Com11ton HIGH JUMI" Fu!k1r10n, Sen" Ft l11:iram, Mornl.,.sldt Frlorldl. LomPOC: ICotlnllli:, Mllllk.., M1r!, VllLll Ptrll l'Ot.ll VAULT Hamtr, S1nt1 ll1rblr1 Keebler, Upland Tlldltr, G1~1 Vain, lnklewood Kr lnt, S1nt1 Mirta HlU, M1Vf1lr Wllczrnakl, Narrr Ollmf' LONG JUMJI McAll1tlr, lllllr e._n, PolY B1t111r. PolY Tod!;!, wnt Ctlvln• W1rt11B. Muir SHOT l"UT Wltllrow, P1110e111 Freber11_, Sen Marino P1gl!, ~ultrrl()n Sdilller. Mlll1k1n McCall, Clflll!nr'llll DIKUS MeDonouoh, Monti Vlsll Ollnlfn, Oranve Evens, 0••"9' f'.-,.r11, San Marino Rl~r. Cor0111 dtl /Mr Race$$$ To Injured Driver Cook The San Gabriel Valley Speedway in Irwindale will host a 100-lap championship event Saturday night for NASCAR Paciftc Coast late model stock can. Pe!>P<lra. Coml'lon (trier, Bcmlll Knudson, Torr1nce Ale1r1ndtr, Comp1on Whllr, S1nl1 An• C:l>llll, Sunny Hlll1 Jahru.on Slelr Hotll1, E11""-er L1Cor1. Hirt D1slll1ll, C:omplon 21t TUltH Lebow, Nortl'I (A:lve.,Jde> Wl\111, ~rtlt A,,. Time trials begin at 7 with 11.3 the first race billed for 8 :!:J o'clock. '·' ••• Al1x1nder, Cilmpfon KriYro1lak, G1~n Greve 81rmrl't!• Lorl9 81K11 W!ti.on J1cobl, Chinn.I lsl1nds m !STRAIGHT) Hldn , Mornlno1lde WlnJltad, $1nt1 An• ~l:: The evening will feature a , .. , trophy dash, two heat races Hlckl. Mornlno•ldt44f Krrv1osl1k. Gardl!ft Grove ~~~w.'stnr: An• C:c!w111, H1wthorne Moitt, P151def11 Toylcll", C:rnl1nn11r .. Keen .... Mornlntskltt Frtt'lek, Wl'l!ttlrr Moses, P1sa<1en1 Huslwld<, 19un1 811C11 Senior, Monte11lr Mil.I! 21.~ 11,9 1.1.1 •l.J ••• ~1.6 •• •• ~··· I $2.I '""·' l 5-1.2 • S4.3 '~· ~~te~E1~~~rr•11U ::l;:: P1tt1l"aCWI, BlshoP MontoomerY ~:1•.J Murr1r, Mira Co.ta ~= lt.f Woolley, El MoMno 4·uo TWO MILIE .... White, El Madrn11 9:0!.0 JohnlOll, Wnl Torr1ne1 9:05.I> r::.•:;. ~1f1~ ''06·' .toll-. Mlr1 Costa ;:J:,.o, 1• HIGH HUltDL•I : . Hill, Mornl.,.slde Jadlson, Lom~ G1llf't!lr, Pair Area Briefs and the lQO..Jap main eventer with a $5,250 purse. It will mark the second . outing of the 1970 campaign for Pacific Coast late models and the 30-car field will be led by delendlng champim, Ray Elder, in a '70 Dodge. All proceeds will go to in. jured PCLM driver Jim Cook, of Norwalk, who is cmfined to the intensive care_tnlt at RITer1,de Community Hospital. Cook has been bospilalized since a Jan. 15 9Cddent in the Motor Trend SOO at Riverside. ' Cycles at Mesa Speedway motorcycle racing returns to the Orange County Fairgrounds Stadium Friday night at 8 after a seven-month absence from the fast dirt oval. Steve Bast o( Van Nuys won the last r~ there and is back at the Fairgrounds oval to defend his crown against almost the same field which ; competed for honors last October. , The J9-year~ld San Fernan. co Valley resident will contend against the likes ot. Sant4 li.1onica·s Larry Heinsleman: Sunny Nutter of Culver City, Lawndale's Don Hawley and Ed Mulder of Burbank. Also given an excellent chance of wresting the title from Bast is a top area rider, Huntington~ Beach's Rick Woods. ~"'some of the variou's events slated for Friday night's card are special match races, best pairs ari'd handicap events. where the better riders are forced to start 4-0 or SO yards behind the starting barrier. • UC Irvine Night with the i Angels will take place Friday, li.1ay S at Anaheim Stadium when the California Angels r play host to the New York Yankees. Ad vance ticket sales on the UC I campus will close Monday al lhc physical educaUon of. fice at Crawford Hall. Local Soccer Dance Set Satuttlay The Coast Ranger Soccer Club will hold their 7th annual dance at the Balboa Pavilion Saturday. rrom 9 p.m. to l a.m. Tickets are prlced at.. SI.SO • each and will be available f.o the public el the door . 011ncing will be to the '·Harmooaires." The Rangers have won lhe- T'acUic Soccer League five limes In the past seven years. There. will be door prizes and spot prii.es. All proceeds (frt'TI this affair will go to .i. iQiw'e:! ~~~ {und. baseball fans have an op- . portunity to purchase tickets on the terrace level ($3.50) or view level ($2.50) through Monday~ Proceeds from the advance ticket sale will be used by the Big I Booster Club for achievement award scholarships to deserving UCI student·atbletes. In pre-game ceremonies at Anaheim Friday night, coach Gary Adams will introduce the Anteater baseball team in- dividually at 7:4S. For further information call 83U93t. . ' Inronnal opening new Ontario Motor speedway will take place, Sun- day, Aug. 9. when an umisual pro-am auto rat"t takes place to serve as a shakedown cruise for the multitude of working personnel and traffic control experts Jor t h e California 500 Sept. 6. Stars of the e'flterlainment world will be paced by actor Paul Newman in team racing competition. Each of them will be paired with a professional driver for the event to be contested over the 2.7·mile portion of Ontario's infield road course. David B. Locktoo. OMS president, revealed .that the $50,000 purse will be donated to the Motion Picture and Television Relief Fund and thal monies raised from a special ticket sale through OMS Vlct«y Circle Club members and the Jlll>lic will go to the favorite charity of the winning .elebrlty driver. JC Baseball . Standings IOUTM C0oll5T CONl'lllllNC• W L 111 Ctrrlttt 1' 1 San D•-11 s j Ml San 41!fot>lo lO • Sift DI-Mell I 1 ,"':i F11lltnotl J t 5'rlll AM l 1l °''"" Cotll ~ 1S . ........ , ....... C:1rrlla1 I. Fvllertlln 4 llfl Oi..t ll. llflll A~ ! '-n O!-Mn4 t. Mt, '-' Mto1111 • Dr.,,.~, ...... ---...... c-.. ' Thursdi)', April JO, 1970 ' DAILY PILOT ff LIMITED QUANTITY Guardian* Premium POLYESTER 4 PLY CORD WHITTWAU '*COAl1' TO COAIT WAllAN1'T ::::~ ....... •2165 ~~=:~ ....... •2230 :~:::: ....... •2265 :~:::: ....... •2310 ~~:::: ....... •2411 :~:::: ....... •2629 J78-14 . •2733 J78-15 .•.••••. 9D0-15 ..••••. ~2785 f1d. b . Tix u . from 1.:14 to 3.02 0PlEMIUM drliOMllDn ,_l•ltl to !hi priy111 qu1tilJ 11....itnll of '"-Nrb!H. Thtl'I if no Mne., 1tllldtr9. • tonger tile • • ••• 1mag1ne . a Radial Tire with these features anti at these prices! • More blowoul m\.d p11Dcl1lre proleC~OD • More secarilY ol high speeds • Save up lo 83 on gos • tonlulic cornenng, slopping power ond skid conlrol NEVER BEFORE AT THESE PRICES ! 185-14 l•plofft 735°14 er UO· 14 195-14 .... ,., .. 775.14.,. '70.14 SET OF 4 5155°0 2 for 583 '0 700.13/695-14 735-14/615-15 735-15 11s.141m14 775-15/125-15 155-14/885-14° 900-15/915·15 WY CllDIT TUMS USE YOUR MAJOR CRIDIT CAIDS sn OF4 sn OF4 SET OF4 205·14 l,.i.c• IU-14 ... ,.. .. *17500 205-IS ~im.11 w tJ'O.IJ 2 for $93.50 211-14 •tflac• ISS-1 4 -lf70.14 *18500 21S·IS •••lie" ISS·l I H IJ70.15 2 for $98.50 22S·1S lmHH ... *21500 2lS-1J l~IHH •• f.15 2 for $1 13.50 TRUCK TIRES PICKUPS • CAMPERS ~·.~a, ....... $1945 • 700-16 ~·,. NylM $26.CS, •••••• noo1• ... ,,. Nyllll Nf.u ••••••• . ~~.L'itr..: ····· P'LU' nt, U . TU $140 TO $4.21 IA. 7.3S·l4/7.75·14/7.7S-1 S 2 for 526 each $16 95 f'fu1 Feil. h. Tn $1.14 t9 $2.04 ,., til'I •P1•4i"1 Oft lilt .1.00-1.4/1.25-14 7.10-lS/l.15-IS ·2 for 532 each $19.95 ,,.;. "'· h·~J2.l7 h $2.23 ' ,.r tlrt "' ... a .. 7.60-lS/IAS•lS 2 for 5 38 each $22 95 Plu1 f14. b . Tu: $~;47 to $2..IO per tin Npe11tli1t1 en 1b:1 U.S. MAGS (Sprint Type) 14/7 Installed . FREE 2for$49 !'!.,. , .... f t.,_ -tlf'I SJ.JS• U.n ......... • obte M7 ... 14/l.SS-14 · H78·1S/l ,SS· 1S n1.1111.1s:-1s e" Ii '!-l.l Y'i r••• '""'· ~ir.' '••,,. ,.,. u.•1 .. u....,..... ... ,; .. WHITEWAil OHl Y $2.95 MOllf •sn"' ,,,...,_ ,_,.. .................... ~ .. ~ •• ' - • ,. DAILV PILOT -I wll'i'• "Pl-.... ';. tMDooat:r • A~ Pa!M.u GOLF Snrool;imit .... .,... e ,. • . ' ~ "w•••YOURW-HT "INSIDE" YOUR FUT • ,! R.ebiove(i · ~ ""~ · ·:". of th• b••t ways to in· •••••••••llil•••lliii,i. iiii.ii.,iii,.iiiiiili ' · ', , , .. \.,. ·~ sure' 1ood b1l1nce is to see . .. t,... ..._ .-...·1a'Calif«nltt ~ SaturdQ:.. lbe, ::LbDltlem la f tbe:~wd fqc-:11 ' .th•t your wei1ht never pa,sses ~"ijor Ibo' <nllre ate 18 .,..i. !Mtf Ullo ~-..,.. (t•.~ln,r ~~.t~!i~:.tslde of your feet as -lhlJ \lmi! •GI :rur will bll lbe •1-, .~ ·uie:-8.Jt..-~ Address tho ball with asli&ht ~ ._.._ J the -I f ~ t• • , -I ,~ .. --ii.a. 11,.,,;, , _ IUCCllll or~"" ...,._. .. ;'Y ••. ,, _, · · "'~~....--.. ·-felling af weight being towards ··,All Jil..O tii!Ow ;u.6 t,oot loal 'JiwOl ',._:iee '.!no '1!111 1 latlie 1m;.r.i and~' the Inner part of your feel (ii· liiavDy .. lloCUI •Uh tnuL Weter C<Jlldltlool lll".-ldifil.Jb aD V11Ji71. :. -:.:·•. ·• lustrationfl). tpe toodlJde> ~ t'!'f t1rumi ..,,......, a. Jli!I'· ~.Gome TllO. Jldi• ·bill!lil ,I• a'.• ------<(2 .WC!a1s ' , , • •-"; • ' ~•di .'tit' J*cth1ib '.:. :c-101 w~ ... m _... .llWIY t....,tiidr .• a(.,..._ ..,.. llil!. ·~ ., 10. 9llll good filbla&.prvvldlog ~---,-.lljor-}*9. 2"'' _...._ ........ -Bait ' fllbermeD ueq-T!n', ,.., .. SabnciD ~-....-.me ,, .......-...... 1 •• \-~ will catch the mod fllh, but Ille blqtr" illll Wtll''lll --· · ID '"• < o ••led • "1 bolla trolling Rebels or Rapolu' with •·:-•: mJIU.,., ~ aD s1tnl !torn lor ••-~ and --"··llollll ' ' 1. ' " ' •' •. ......_ ..__,••I J -ol .• ~ wonn l,NUJIH.llO • ...~ i··.:.: ... .,. -, • -.-~........., \a - • In the other ·lat~ ~.Jiit E111 n;~8ip ·8ierra tbelrk!nd'fromMerico'JGull fl&nne.n CM eipect above lvertllf' ~.-+W °t'*~ All at. CiUfnla' In 1951. • As you twin1 ba ck and up, your weisht should aradually shift to the inside of your right foot. 1s mine has in Illustration 12. Thi~ will protect.you aga inst lakes . In the June Lake Loop _. ·~:~ •• -As Ille l'ffUll, Ca111ornla'o ~bi( br""!l.ltoclc. and a)I oboWd produce:~·""'~ " . . Fish and Game CommluiOn ••• '8ridseport. 1-r end u_,Twia,Llbi,-Jllt,)Vltir / -lbl llalloo Sea 1111 River&<• alJ .Jikecy-to Ii•• up brown INUI la''"'*' 11 lt llmlt'"' Sorp. AJiP!1 may I pounds.• ~ 1 1 I • 11~. noiJ f1lh fdr them 14 ·hourf --·111e Owena 1Blver ww be fair, arid "tbt \lidiiii ,..tu..r. ~cd.ly, Ml a,. a yev, with' oo Pl~ V1Uey Dam will mob 'lllfllili~ -...UJIOe .., llmlt ':~te.ei ."on tb8 an• bod, swa•lo the ri•ht. lor lbe b1o filb.. .. · \ · · . · , · ,catcll. · . , ' ' • • :...,.. ' ,,.. •-• .'....;l...... · • m..-..._Med to _,.._ On your downswing and ~: BlrchiO> C1111ciii 'will be hldlar· lame . .._.. .Jlmii. .ol 11,:;;;r• -".' 0.:~ 1 I through ;mpact, your weight re-~' and ·~ .trout for koowled,eablt .&Dgttrs •1flshlng ' ' .arw · ~ t! turns to the inside of your left Checking, Out Pl~osp_~ctus For , Trout ·Season !·Opening Callfomla's belt tr oat opener in tectnt year1 Is ex· -by lhla weekepd-,U the Weather coo~ates. "The best in year•" Is the forecast tor the popular Mono- Inyo area east of the Sierra, with nearly all roadside lakes and atreams open aod in prime fishing condition for the Saturday opener, following an wtusually mild winter and ear- IY sprina. Forecasts are equally good from a number of other popular areas, with roads ex- pected to be open and lakes and atreamJ ice-freewxl clear up to 1,500 feet elevation in the north and as high as a,ooo. 8,500 feet In the central and southern Sierra. The general season con- tinues through November. 15 in most of the state with a limit of 10 trout per day, 10 in possesslon, but not more than 10 pounds and one fiah. Anglers 16 and older and required to have a basic angl- ln1, license ($3) and two etaf)'s Fork, Ke n n e d y Ucense stamps . Gt eadl). In • Meadows aftd Don ft e 11 a their posse&a1on when fishing Reservoir in Tuolumne County for trout. will have cold water and pro. The outlook: bably will be roily for the · opener. CENTRAL COAST COU~ The Golden Trout Area in Most of, the popular waters Kern and Tulare counUes is rely on planted catchabel,trout open to fishins: with artificial to sustain the fishing, and 1 minim l .Z million cat.chables will be ures only with a um size limit of &ix inches. stocked this year .in 4.1 lakes, reservoin and streams in 13 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA counties of the DFG's Centr3.l A wtiopplng 20 tons of Coastal r e g i o n . ~fost catching-size r 1 i n b o w 1 - reservoirs are open all year, 150,000 fiSh-have been atock- but streams will be open for ed in Mono and Inyo road.side the firsl time oo May Z and waters to supplement a good conditions are expected to be hQ_ldover popu1ation, and an good to excellent. .addiUonal 1,0. fish im ~ CENTRAL, s 0 u T H E R N ll'Q-!o SJX,poui!Ci, Class/'"'"' SIERRA bfen Jllstrlbuteil a 11\ o n k Roads generally are open q>adllde l.alf:I in the 'l9· \' up to the 8,()00..foot level in An unusually mild winter the western Sierra, but the and early sprlng have com· best fishing will be up to blned to make water and road about 5,000 feet. conditions the be91. in years. Lakes and 'streams should Crowley Lake. which has lbegorg:e,butqSeftarewamedtowatchlllltfC!f.~-fi~ ..._.._·'_11.:..· C""I. · 1 foot (illustrittio n#3).8yavoid-.... 'niere is aft 'outsJdt chance of snow in tbe bilh -·icowrtr'1 ':nm~,, ... .._,,, ., " n 1 · ·1 h'ft' to th t 'd f ... •"ll'fl ·-carry chain> In lbeJr< .... 'aiid '"""•".aloof .~ ... blue ~rd>· by mg Is s I mg e OU SI e 0 O.regon Pltnly of warm oWNni J·ust in cue. . . -..... ~ fhbltn\in, aario fl:V" this foot on your downswing, 0 • ·~ to Oftl' 20 tnchel: .and four ~• you will properly keep your be in good condition for the been ice-free for a month, opener. Particularly outstan-is expected to yield some 30 ding waters Includ e the Upper tons of one-pound average Kern River, above JCernville, trout to the ~nds of boat In Kern County; Mammoth and shore anglers who will Poll in Madera County ; fish there on opening weekend. Shaver Lake and Wishon First-day prospects al!o are n.eservoir in Fresno County : excellent on June, Gull, Silver, the main Tuolumne River and <..rant and Convict Lakes, the middle and south forks; Lundy Lake , Bridgeport Moccas in Creek, L y 0 n s Reservoir and Upper and Reservoirs, Pinecrest · Lake Lower Twin Lakes Bridgeport * * · * ---pounds In Clliforola' head behind the ball. . ' ,. . • ' boys llld -~· .... :....~~ ---.. e .... M~ -... Standout II! ... Vp ---~,,C.~ •: ·~ , ~!:'J.~·-" att now ap. 1;::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;::::::=:====: . " . S.IM:m Callf.ni. Jdiel ~ .!l..&t-1_,.a It Uq'le pc:imds. IRON OUT TtlOSE IRON SHOTS! Ar nold P1lm•r'1 book11t "Hlttinc 11'1 .._ •1111:~ 1 Metalltc..i:lver ·in color with th• Irons" 1ives ch1mplonlhlp tip• to htlp sh1rpen ynu r iton·•hot T ll Goal ....... ·ti• (er -·· Mt) • w. oa •• .,,. .... tlte a ,1(1,. tiap (ID tl;>e . back, t9chmQu•. S.nd 20.·1nd • 1tlmJ)Ml. ttturn •nvelopt ta Atnold I e s s ........ -............... .-..... --..... tbe llJ'IO u.euuy kltntified Plhiter."'e11;9ofttil1nffllplP"f'. -. .......... ---11111 ...... -• ...,. .... d-~ rU--·· 11ne ._ __ ;__ __________ ==='- and Beardsley Reservoir in Pleasant Valley Re&ervoir Tuolumne. County. and the Owens River from The road from Twain Harte Pleasant Valley ~ownstream EUGENE, Ore. -Steve tG the north shore of Lyon"' to Big Pine, along with Topa:z: . ...... .. .. ........ .. . . '. . ., . ~·· .. ,... .... nil!i aciols.the body. · VaD ~· .... j,,,..,. ..;;;-••,;, ·,;1,,,.. Allblqli For the ....... ..-king lo Prefontaine , a freshm'" al 1 nl Lake-all o! which are open ............. ., -~ --........... ,Ille weebod pad both bit. 'f/J' and his llleftwualacklfw~-• .,.. · ' lll'dtt, the llFG ~ ~ suuutJON .foe ·filbla& ...... at Salton Sea: . Defending Champ In SACC Finn ls ... , Reservoir is passab e o y to f h' u the University of Oregon, talks +wheel drive vehicles. Her· to year-around is mg-wi quietly about the running r ing Creek Reservoir i n be specially restrocked for the goals he hopes to achie""' t11;s Fu 1 n. 'II be opening weekend. '" o umne ...vunty w1 open St fl hi hould be Earl MatbeWI oJ Saa'8 . -~'f! 1 tk... nd ftiJ lfodtand GI NtwPert· Bed, all ....... lo -<I Jiau.· . . . . .. . Thia writer ltail.fitr ti pod ·-._. • S!Dl .. witt ~ l'i!ol' hi _ !!i.e .. ~ 1:118 ti-:-., ll&W' la Ille weeds, ,..t -.., ... le -lol fO,tlle•N Wtrled very olew)J'ocro"-llle nr1 ... 1a IM Ille ....,_ · ' ·" . . ' j"""' bet ·P.at·:rvJeJ GI Nl:wllM·----Vall -loll ·-oa.a ......_,, •U..)' ud iiiaW ·iettoo ped Ii< bps, qapple ud blDeill· Tllrley -. lbe · llT• .ball - Jihc.t'1 Bait," wklda pedl saltwater .Ullen as tltey leave ~.jelly lhlrlq oprto1 m ....-r "!'l'lu. • ' ;, * * ·* • . 1...,1 .... A ... 11 ... l •proba ,,, ·• . . • 'I. ,. ... Waler temperature and filhi..ri& are wlUlJll:I& U)l,at 1t'VIOe "1£e, and the outlook for this coming. weeUnd la aooil, 'l1loot wl>o. can not find llme tu travel to the lfilli SJema_ -will llDd good trout llsblng la Oraqe County, . • • , • , ~ Lake if atoc;l<ed week!)' with fisJ>liq.< Hb>llOw. .u.ut and the fish are u ·ocrappy as. lould In 11"1 bip e!oVlllaa l:ike ·• • . . ' . 1n' addition In· the. line ~ fishing at lrYine,· th.. IU:e'o boss are hlttlilg good. Basamulers Jerry Dromk]r ml ·w.;ne 9'mm1nP •lrllnl full llmlts'of the bromabaeu,lo four·pounds 0. leadh'ead jigs. · , , lJass are acUve in about 10 feet or waier d\ll'int most of the day. ud' mo.ve into the' ~ower -eovea ·late IQ the WI~ actlop " 100<! on ....i-' Plue•·. . . . " .. .. * * * •. llanld Dope' If Coall -llabed Lati ·wtWl...i ·~ Ge· weekend ud ft~d bfiK wttll a 7. i.., I :~· bell lie cup! oo o Flallbock hon. Aclloo a< tllo .JU;t,.- otly a couple mlleo lalod lioa -Ide, la ..... hr - ).HI ud crappie..· , '"' • • * * '*· lt'liub Sloto Slllt Scelle . ,. , Boats along the enUre south coast ·have· aot been able ~. ·~· out ,due to the 111111 winds bullloi lbe .-alt .-.. Moot GI the action bu btto ill>q lh<.aliorellne,:but ll>O caicl>el. are nOthlDg to brai abool ,. ,... rew good• sbowin8• of bass, bonlln and· 'butaeuda ltiiihliahted the action, but ror the most part· sklppeis had tO put their p~ngen on gOOd rock cod boles to fill their ucks. . . .. · Eddie McEwen of Pocmc Sporlfisblq, In 1'qn( •J!each Is ·"""""' one ol his bigger boata fo S.. Cleihliite"laland and reports lh1t the yellows are in tbe :nter and mattna" ~ p>d ~wing; but are reluctant to blU!: · _ t •. M •soan u th~ waler wanm up a, bi~ .tl!e ~ ud white sea bass at both the outer Wands. will come alive, predict.a McEwen. ; , . Bay Fishing ·is still 1ood in the qwmels and ' 'in the l>Rl bay. Some big tn>alter and sand -·are bltlllg cllma and blood '!Orms la the blld< bay op. lnComlntr ancr odtlolll& tides. • .. ::-son SEµ. SA M ly, Mani• Myen .. . • .. 'Y/ /' ,, • / Sat&o ate ·not generally . taken · 111 w1ter lea than '"Iii or elgl!Heet deep. Thal mU.. them dllftcult to reach 'from a ...,tly sliJplng. !>tlfl!, ~elUes, pien· llld bltl"-'"' the best •il<l for the' angler wilhoul a 'tiOal . ,,. Good betS for bolt anglers are areu· around barnade-en- ermted rocki or the remains ol -rpt bof!c!idp, brush and tree llnet. s.me boat aftfltn pttf'u te drilt until tbeY find filb-. Others' prefer to -In • llbl_y spot and •1~1111r•. • " llclJt . ·"'-ultl•llalJ!; red 1s ldul. a-. •tgh~ to ID'pl(md lino ls 'J)roba~ly the -d>ake. The amall, sharp banlllcles 'loond throuaJ>oul Silton St!il CID, quickJy cot :=..::-.lo~ Many ~argo ~ts use a lin&le .Pum.ber ·four, 1i% or eight !il~bolder hook al,>oul 11 lnchet below a llrbl calling wel&!iL It'i illtllal lo 'fish 11ith more than on&· line or more thin lwo ~ L«ol llckle lhOPr can aw y'ou a. two- ~ )lal~der crappie rig thtt mllllJ '"'"': llod -· illlbt 'Cnwlers Jnd ·abrimp ~ the moot popular · belts. . , All a r e .. a111tile II latlllt:oi'l'PO and 1.-,. --the sea, Two brpelo of corn threaded .... -. .. -k. An ~eclho.lldmlqQe ii to l<t the balt-bollom, then raial II a bit ~ ~ mov~ . ~ """""'· w;o lend to owlni llOllnc! lo \ooM" 1CbooJi WMhin a few feet ol the "'!llom. Suceessful . . ' F~h .T~dt Detending the championship she has won the past four years with a .flnt de.y low gross score ot M, Mr1. Clar- ence Graham has advanced to the finals of the Santa Ana C~ry Club n.hole women's champiooshlp golf loonwnent that will be ccmpleted on Fri- day. Mrs. Graham won t h e Prep Net Su mmaries ..... w a1t&nclll (U) Ul M•tnell• Sl11t1'" M&lloll !El def, Hoollty IM!., 6-31 def. Honne!bM"' 6-0 1 dd. l'IN'ltr, .. 2.i d.-f. H&I, 1-1. cmtrY !El won 6·2, +-l. ~·f, 6·1. M&u.on (E')......, ...._ 6-3, ... 2, 6-1. Crook fEJ loll :U. H. U1 u lll .... ....... Lew 1rd • Gayner \El d.-f. Hull Ind Md<ttm•r•, 6-3. 6-; dtt, Mll'(lno tnd U terno (MJ, U, H . Stelnftld tlld Set.lnd9,.. (El -6-JI Iott U1 _, 4-1. U . .Jvllllw VtnnY •darKJti -.., ..Uu" V1t11,.,- S.. C'""-te 1»1 Ill Ort~ .. EkelaftCI !51~r.6-1. 6-1, 6-t 6-0Wat,_ IS IDlt 6.t1 -H, 6-J, LLlm~ ($) -~ 6-2. 6-0, 1.0 emNtw !SJ lotl »-'I -6-J ....... . °"'"'" C-2 •1111 K~ (S) bl .U. UJ -6-.""1 MaddocQ ef!d Dowll111 IS) lo..t 4-6. U ;-6-2,6-1 • ....:·(.~~"::" Lw9 Henri IE) Gd, LIPtb (LI M. .... ..,c1111r IEJ lost tll S,.11 fLI '"' • 0-111& CE) i.i.1 IO MDntlth (LI ... ~,, r•milton CEI, tnd OM11 1\J ttlll, t .. ,'t:;'-( ) Iott lo ff'llY IL) o.,. ... l"rlc.ttrlhltr IEI clef. Uncltrwoocf. Alf:onl IL) 7-l, U , 7-l. •ke-Wll111n (T) Ott. lr11Y-K11Hmlll (LI'-'• M. "--'= C~=r~'r4) Tlllflll TtYlor (Lil ~ ..... U. 2 ... - tournament for the first time in 1966 and has repeated each year. Mrs. Arthur Nisson was low nel K'Ofer in first day com- petition with a 112.-20-n. In lhe champloosblp flight, competitors include: Mrs, Clare.nee Graham Jr., Mrs. Alfred Shinn, Mn. J o h D Conley, Mrs-. Eldon Edes, Mrs. Paul Hall, Mrs. L. J . Hines, Mrs. L. D. Colling, Mrs. Freeman Kinzie and Mrs. John Lcwe. Flighl "'"""tiUon has been divided Into four divisioM md champions \vill be crowned after 54 holes. All play is medal competition. First flight entrants include: Mrs. Jack Mahoney, Mrs. L. N. Harrison, Mrs. M. H. Koll. Mrs. Merle Boyle, Mrs, Roy Crank, Mrs. David Keller and Mrs. Byron Robinson. Second llighl: Mrs. Robert Hoyt, Mrs. Burton Slansbury, Mrs. John Price, Mrs. William Greschner, Mrs. Arthur Nls300, Mrs. Earl Beeman and Mrs. James Voelkl . Thin! fll&lll: Mrs. Claytoo Rose, Mrs. Uayd . Stocker, Mrs. Harry Perry, Mrs. Harry Martin. Mrs. John Drury, Mrs. Frances Sdunid, Mrs. Patrick Hart and Mrs. Ano Capera. Fourth fl.ijht : Mrs. Robert Maypole, Mrs. Harry Ward, Mrs. L. J. Ruoff, Mrs. Leonard Hall and Mrs. Bruce Dolsch. Fifth flight: Mrs. Thomas Pekin , Mrs. Eugene Fason, Mr. Jack Beaumont, ~trs. ctarles Talmage. Mrs. Donald Shivley and Mrs. Charles Page. ~111l.6~·1.io:• 1t 1f ... °"'J·~:'·- Sill Newport Budl reeldents 1'.oM '"' ""-!.1' .._ .._ ,.._ El Niguel toot a boU4'1 lo'. Mn.ICo to .,,';'ff,YJ..2.~ ~rttr IL•I _, In a partner's best ball tat lllblnt: eonditkJm and tll ~·~ •"" T1v1W 1u1 -1-1. tournament at El Niguel Coun- retumed home wltb stories of ~ ... .,::; 11~1n'J!'lll M""'4'-try Club ln Laguna Beach, WCCU.. s.. c..._-:\1.::J "lf~I °"'-Dr. Robert Wilbur and Robert Dr. and Mr•·· S. R. o...1111n: 1sc1 _, .,,, ...... 1• Evans won low net honors New-caqbl.a !IS-pound <\.,. "" with a 60. marlin. JUclW'd B. Smith 7.1!-v t1e1V.:,.."L~~l:..'1:.i.w. James Gaumer and Charles Clqbt a ~ a.net Mr. !!f:I.'.!. ,,,. ~.,..,... "'· "'· Osborne tied wltb Ralph Mer· and..Mz:l;Hany 'E. w.-m: ..0:-"" ..... '""'""' fSC I -M , rill and Jim Marshall for :se- caupt • rooeterfilb, daipbln. J.., • ......,. cond place . year. for the first time, but the ream s ng 5 good all the way !ram "J'd like to do a sub road may be blocked by snow. southern Jnyo County to the -4-minute mile .•.. and win Kaiser Pass at 9,175 feet We!j:t Walker River in northern the NCAA and AAU cham-Is sUll closed but may be Mono County. piooships" in the S.mile, said opened by opening day for Sabrina Lake, North Lake, the >foot·9, 14>pound distance' access to the Upper San Joa-!tock Creek Lake ·and some runner. quln River and Edison and of the Mammoth Lakes may Prefont.aine's dual me et Florence Lakes. or may not be open and ac· performances this spring are Tioga Pass will be open into cessible, d e p e n d l n g on ample justifk:aUon for his Yosemite National Park for weather. South Lake, the quiet ct1nfidence that he will the opening weekend, but the Virginia Lakes and the Tioea achieve his goals. Tioga Pass lakes may still Pass Lakes probably will bl The unbeaten Prefontaine:lirbeiiirro;"';;n;. ;;;;p;;;:;;mfund;;•;';;;ce;.;=:;;;;;;ii~ has doobled In the mile and Z..mlle in two meets and, ln the 3-mile last weekend, he ran a 13:12.8 -nearly ha\£. ma1ute better than h i s previous personal best -and the nation's fastest this year. This weekend. Prefontaine will run only the mile Jn a dual meet against Oregon State and -with the coopera- tion of the weather -the first of the 19-year'1>id's goals may be reached. But Prefontaine is strongest in the Z.mile and 3·mile - events traditionally dominated by runner'" in their late 20s. ·Ron Clarke of Australia, who is still competlng at -30, set the world 2-mlle mark of 8:19.6 when he was 26 and the 3-mile world standard of 12:50.t at za. B i 11 Dellinger ~ate track coach at Oregion and a world class distance runner until he was nearly 30, said the distaDce rurmer'a peak is between the ages of 25 and 32 -and even older U the runner can keep runnm1 first in his life. "Age gives you eX'P'!l1ence, confidence "~ c a rd J o. vascular etficle11cy," s a Id Dellinger, wbo won hls bronze medal in Ult 1964 Olympics, eight years after he was graduated from the Un1versity of Oregoo. Dellinger died lhe gold medal winners « distance events in recent Olympic! - all 15 or older. Prefontaine, listening In- tently to bis coach during the interview, said, "We'll have' to make an exception in the 1972· Olympics. Prefontaine, who wUI be 21 then, wasn't joking. Win a trip for 2 to the 1970 Indianapolis 500 as the pers onal gue st of Mario And retti- A set of new Firestone ' . ··500·· t ires! siierra. ind ytllowtall in ad-,....._ 'UJfi.?. IA ••• In a two best ball . of cfjtb\toa l~i:narlln. ..f.11~11· CE \ dd. 111rou11r' 1s•1 foursome tourney, Mr. and BOAT BUFFS Robert E.· Re.J' c I ugh t Wiit tEI kilt 1o l"etttsoft (SAi Mrs. Lloyd Foley tea.med with Almon Lock1b1y 1, ffi• 0111., . . - "Come in and rqiale.r fc1r the hie priu drawin1 eonl•t. .. no cmL or obli(1tion. You may win a tree trip to the 1970 lndianapolia &00 race aa the ruest of Mario Andr1tti ···• 1et of new, wide Fireatone "500" tit11. You owe It to 7ouro. aelf to'" the new Fir.tton• "600''tod&Ji" ' f'OOlterflib ~ nd snapper· .,u~1 !El def. 01111vero. tSAI Mr. and Mrs. Robert full-ti"'' bo1tl119Hltor wottln9 but no marlin. ~t~ltMCI (El ..,-, Wrllhl !SAi Schukmann for {int place. 11n 111y "'""P'f:' In 0...1191 All of the ·ftlh were caught Nit:iton (El 11"· otson IMi .. 1• Mr. and Mrs. Robert Car-County. Hit tn .,,1 .. 1or-ri9• while """'"• out. ol Rancho.. ••· ..,_ rick teamed with Mr. and of botll119 11\d Y••htl11f ._.. ,_,. M Ro DI I f nd 11 • dally f•ttv,.. •f tM DAILY Buena.Vlsta,Jq:attd south ot. ,,:~11111 r,:r•1 ,t \!._ID•t.., M•1titwt rs. y ve or seco PILOT. .A4tu-~' ....... La P B ~· M II ·.•11m11 •IWI ~"'°". f!I IMt to ,_;Pc:l:•ce:::.. --------==========='II ~'::::u:'::':~:·::e::;.;o:.::;:;::;::;::':="':""=:':"""::"::''""::"'::·:"'~=, I ~ RYlllG FUN! Vtlf '"' ""I~ ., llW fi retton e R~~~s~gs , .. , -, lly WAYNE CHAsE -~ 7.'~11 . ._...,......,.....,........, ___ -=..._1 ' '\. -_, "' It ;.,,, . dlftlC.ill to -~~ . • .='~' <t>·te:> f fr> &lJrR NOT rm· m. CfFICE' · ')W. Olfr. GET IH GEM· lJ!AT MAt'FS ~ St® ~£.ssl'. · . t • . • . ' ------·--- -. lo 1111 Y6u ·may hkve' ·heard that tt'a u ~ u drtv· Inc. But thla ata~t •· toUld 1be ~hat mts- ;'.Joe41nr.11 -·mW ... ~ .100 h&vt to drive. .ACtu&lb', you don't: have to kriaw 1'ow lei ~e. You • ' cu .tl1 a ' plane wi6'out knowtnc anyth1na ·Hout -. You .,.1 the. pilot'• jqb ii bteom ng inictl:a,dftglv ... i.r. Im-&lrcrilt dnlJft malttt the l))•ntt n.ler to hand!•. 'Better ~uloment atmplltlft the ...,t'> Job W makOI )I, llkf', And .,..._ In· ab'Uct.lona.t ttch.n~ut1 tum .. , belltr ,,_ • You 1hould ·~ In a •ood ochool with 'qualln.d inltructon. Place y0W1elt In profession.l handa for your night tralolns. Coln· tna: the rontidence to fly overcomes yuur Ont ob-stule. And you can pln ,. that oonndence from com· petent htt:tructon. 11 ........ " fly, "" ..... -le MAlteotl AvtATMHll • ..................... ~ ..... f1llM iK""1 .... IM ...,....,, ., '"*"' ,.... .... 11r ....., "''' 111MllMI. c ..................... ., .. MA It e 0 It AVIAYIOM, tUT ....... ,..... ....u... °""' ·-........ " ....... ffif¥. ... ,.. .. -c.111-.... .., ...... lit """' ,., ll'lly .,, ..... WATCH NIXT WEIK FOR TIME ILEMINT ------------·--~-=------------ INSTALLED CHAIN~LINK FENCING ··'°·" slO Blaekwalla • All tltw 1lmll1rfy low·pl'iced Whit•w.llt Hd tl.ZI Pkn 37C Fed.. excla• ux end rectr>c>ebl• *• oft your c:ar. .firt$fOnt THE MILEAGE SPECIALIST COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH 475 E. 17th St. 16171 Beoch Blvd • 646-2444 147-6081 HOUIS: HOUlS: Mu.-ftf., I •ate f ''"'· Mn . ....fn .. I e.111, •• f p.-. S•., I ...... I P.."!· ht,, I e.111. te I p.111 • . ------- • I mt Bard, Fast CambodW, Action Has Big Gamble WASHINGTON CAP) -The U.S .• supported South Viet- namese move Into Cambodia could yield a double dividend, mlllt.ary sources say. ground, and the full scope of the operation . The orig!"' ol the operation were obscure. So.me P:ertagon sources said As they see k, the aoUon they underse..tt ba~ aiuld ease the North Viet-• Cambodian Premier Lon Nol namese thrtat to the Cam-bad asked the South Viet.- bodian capital of PMom Penh namese for help Jn diverting while disrupting a key base North Vietnamest and Viet area from wbicil the North Cong troops threatening his NEWS ANALYSIS Vietnamese and Viet Cong oflen have struck into South Vietnam. Military officers ~uggested t h e apparently large-scale South Vietnamese operation into Cambodia's "Parrot's Beak" might help derail any enemy offensive moves into South Vietnam next month . The South v:etnamese at. tack supported b y American advisers, fighterbombers, artillery, heli- copters, medical and sup ply aid-marked a widening or the Southeast Asian war. What it will mean to the United States over the long haul remains uncertain. NO ELABORATION Pentagon officials refused to elaborate on a series of sketchy statements issued by the United States and South Vietnam. · 1't1e Saigon defense ministry Mid the South Vietnamese troops will pull back from Cambodia when they complete their mission of neutralili.ng the enemy in the Parrot's Bea'K, which noses into South Vietnam only 35 miles from Saigon. ! However, there was no in· i dic.alion whether this was 1 I one shpt operation or the forerunner cif others to oome I there and in other North Viet- riamese occupied sectors ir>- 1 ilde cambodia. Other unanswered questioas involved the "rules of j engagement '' fo~U.S. elements supporting the South I Vietnamese , any geographical l llmlls on U.S. penetration of I Cambodia, the number of American advisers on the capU.1 and small army. 1besa sources said there were reports that Saigon's joint general staH, after con- sidering the Lon Nol bid several days ago, asked the U.S. Command in Saigon for air and other support in a foray into the enemy base area in Cambodia. MANY MEETINGS ! i Newest Youth Fad • 1 Results in Hanging • I • I See by Today's Want Ads e nfROW-BACK to tbe ~ling """"''" -PE-KJNGUE puppin, 6 weea, maJer, m each:. e Al the Md of the raf:nbow 1n mien:, lone •hac hMd tied DECOR.ATOR ~• rup, various colon. me. IUld pricH. • You auppty the brain, tt does the mt mM wtec- trlc typcwrit4'!r; nearly new, J typlna ballt, $350. r • 5 on Coast Get Awards ----------------------------- -· Apl11 JO, 1970 DAILY PILOT IJ ' I I ~ f • • ' p DAILY Pll.OT s. ,,,.,_, A,,U 30, 1970 Money's Wo~tla Mail Order Sales Flourish By SYLVIA PORTER Credit buying bu been II>· t ~ooat Ibo crtasing Jta Ult of tn.lntd Dapite &Ian ft5• p-aalesmen for in-the-home aell. ping «nlen, hlgb,.peed tx· Ing of major •pptlanco and presswaya, aell«rvice Stores, home Improve me o l fn. Sunday shopping, all the rest. stallations. There is a much the catalog m a 11 • o r d e r closer rapport .between the business remains a fascloating customers Lod11y and th& segment of Amerlcina. since catalog companies w b I c b 1967, lndustry volume has serve them. grown from $1.5 billion to over Higher quality, fashionable $3.4 blWon, up more lhan 125 merchaodise Js steadUy being perttnt Jn only a doren years, introduced in colorful c&Lalop And the trend Is still strong. at attractive prices. The 'nle following interview with fashion sections ar~ among Edward :;. Donnell, president the fastest c x p a n d I 11 g of Montgomery Ward, will Pin· departments and they are point the techniques which pulling in new &ales la greater have rejuvenated the mail· volume. order business and r e • But probably the most lm· established the ·catalog as a portant single factor ! 1 maj_or factor in our shopping service. Throuah use of com- ·patterns. puters for ordering, f'lf' ID. PORTER: In the jet age, ventory, for sc h e du 11 n g why has the m a i 1-o r d e r deliveries and for billing, the catalog continued to flourish? industry has geared up io DONNELL: One important streamllnt all of the facets £actor ts that tbe catalog of-of this business. With the fers people a convenient way speed-up behind the scenes, to buy first-class up-to.date manY customers will find and forward-kloking· merchan-merchandise delivered within disc without fighting traffic two nr three days. and, eometimes, inclement PORTER: Of coure, the weather. They are also spared catalog won't put retail stores the necessity of arranging for out of business, and it's likely a babysitter or missing a that both methods o f favorite weekend televisJon merchandising will grow. Your program: company has been in the Working wives and busy catalog business for almost young mothers don't have a 100 years. What do you see lot of lime and energy to happening In this busine5s in browse through stores. It's a the next 100 years? lat easier for them to make OONNElL: The catalog will their 8hoppng selections at bec ome even more home and then to place an sophisticated In its presen- order either by telephone or tations as it anticipates the al a catalog desk in a retaU needs and desires of selective store, a catalog store or a and particular customers. You catalog sales agency. will see more catalog selling Another Important factor is through electronic means -the po15ibillty that catalog -=:.=~===-==-..:.._:.:.....:.._ _______ !~: prices will be lower than those in stores. PORTER: What are some !nnovatlons in qalalog buying'!' DONNELL: First of aU , yo11 can charge your purchases. PROVE IT- TO YOURSELF A111wtri119 Strvi'' Pty1 TILl,HONI ANIWIRING IUltlAU 125-7777 Help for Parkinsons with L·Dopa by TlllY 6lANT, l.1'111 For a long time there was little that could be done to help people suffering with Parklruion's Disease. Stem· ming from a chronic dl11- order ot the central neTv· ous systei:n. its symptoms are a sh&klng pa:lsy, slow· ness of movement and stifl· ening of the muscles. Now a drug "-'ilh the funny sounding name ot L-OOP A appears to be helping people with Parkinson's to improve greatly. AlthoUE:h 15lill being tested. It has been ttcam-mended that the drug be re-leued for us!'! by physiclan1 and it should be available around the middle of this ~ar. Your doctor knows about this. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US whtn yo11 nttd t tleliv•fV· Wt will de li~•' prell'lptly witho11t trirt d1tt91, A 1re•t ll'llftY p1opl1 relv on 111 for their httlth n•ed1. Wt ..,.1. eol'lle rtq11e1'1 for dtllv•ry ,,,...., le• tnd ,h1r9t '''e11Nh. PAIK LIDO PHAlMACY Jll H..,:lttil ..... Mn,_, 9"dl MZ·lllO ,_..,_ The DAILY PILOT- The Ono Th•I C.ros Neill Prealdent Justus C. Gilfillan heads Kaiser A:etna's Rancho California project in southwest Riverside County. As president, he will oversee develop- ment of the 87,500 multi- purpose land site. Prize ~'---• PSA IJIUWe Dlreednf Sele• Newport Beach execu- tive Frank R. Spratt has been named exec- utive vice president and director of sales of Day and Night Manufactur- ing Co. and The Payne Co. in the City of Indus· try. He will direct all sales and marketing functions of the two companies. :ior OVER THE COUNTER NASO Llsttnt• for WoclnM~oy, April 2', 1970 ...,,,, .. ~ .................... 1 ............ MAID. ,,.... ........... "'~ w ..... "' MUTUAL .everf mtnulesto ee1y•c1r• •ctiYe w•1r for Oaklard 7:15 em to l :CS pm. Bott. wap. 7:15ol:CS-10:1S.11 :•S am-1 :1S-2:Cs-.4:1S-lll;CS.7:154:45 pm. More on weekends. -,___ . -. ---.. ......... Syuabols ---·---·---.. ~ . ·-·~--~~~--,_-·--· ·-, • • AprU , 1970 OAJLY PILOT • I I - I I ~ --~ ---,,--------------.... --.------..-.... --....... --.,....., .... .,..,...,,..,...,......,r~T".---~ .. • ,, ,, ""¢'• 34 D,.lltY ~ILOT ( Thursday, April 30, 1970 • • One's ouilook may tlepend an ·one's state of mind. But.a.healthy pair o( eyes ensures a healthy view of the world-li~rally •. Proper functioning.o( ihe eyes, which is ea11ily.taken for granted, can be helped by taking the best possible <"are ol them. A yearly checkup of the eye; iS a sensible procedure. And this should be a thorough examination by a fully·trained opbtba'lmologist using tbe proper .instruments. He can not.on1y check defects in sight and prescribe eyeglasses if needed, but he can spot diseases auch as glaucoma and cataracts.. Glaucoma; for example, is a serious, non· reversible ailment eventuaJly causing blindness.; it is est.imated:that two to three per cent of all Americans over -40 have an undetect.ed glaucoma condition. For this, as for ciltaracts, early diagnosis is ,-ery important, !or the correct medication or surgery, if ,necessary, can help both these condit.ions in 1he incipient stage11. The eye· test js invaluable in another way: many di~ ol the central nervous system and many gen'e_ral.diseases betray them· selves through some eye trouble. The main warning signs are head· a'cbes, blurred vis.ion and painful inflammation of the eyelids. The state of health o!\the eyes and ol the body in generaliittluence each other so much that the ophlhalmologist will begin ·by asking for a full medical history. T11e photographs oD. this page show the m2'fil step11 in the rest of an eye. test demonstrated by Edward P. Perlft,Y, MJ>. attending •urgeon at Manhattan Eye a.odiEar'CliDic; N.'t \·· , I . • ( • I " • • • • .,.,.;Ji;.,,,, Lower left, direct tundoscopy, to study the interior of the eye for pathology. Slit lamp microscopy, for th e study of the interior segment of·lht eye. " Applanation tonometry, to measure the pressure of tM eye, for the detection of glaucoma. Right, Indirect fundoscopy. The.ey! is the only: organ of. the body whose in-'. A·1J. ophthalmologist is a physi1.:ia1i tcho spe4 cializes in the study an.d treat1nent of def~ds and diseases of the eye. An. optomct.rist measures visual 'powers and prescribe• lelises. An optician 111a kes spectac'le lensetifrom presC riptions. Indentation tonometry1 using 1 Shiotz tonom· e ttr1af10 for the detection of glaucoma. terior is easily visible with conventionat lnstruments1 •I ' • Vi1u1I field study on the tangent screen (with one eye masked),,as 1 test of peripheral ,I nd central Vision. · . ' .. ...... • •' • "'' "' • ,,, '· 11• n ' .. . . : . : " • • ~. y, •• ., ~ . -· • I , I 3"1 - . " - . . . .. , . ,_., .. ' HOUSIS '01t SALi IHOUSll'l"OllMLI /HOUSIS '01t SALi HOUS1s Poit SALi ( IHOU$1!S ,l\"OR S'!t~E ~JsEs.;oR ~..$,.:,' .sss FOR sALE. l"ous1s FOlt sAl1 : :11fa\ls_!!s' POR ML·1'· G ... ror , • 1oao o-l'Jll. , , .. ~Gwral 1000 -a• , 1• o-iti_l" i. , '"' ~! J • )!! ~·· !!'!'"• 1221 . o.-Sh·~· . · 1221 ~!·• . ~· LARGE .RlDUCTION I . atlliawt!· -Vie~ Ex~ ours, this 2 Beclr-, .i,. home has • lovely Viow of Boy ond Ocoon. Enclosed poliJ! ~ 9ordon. NEW-VIEW . DOVEl SHORES NOW $39~500 ' HAS EVERTIHING Stop .bo~ii\<I tile 9ardon bMnorointo ~ tr""'luil setting. This lovely 4 Bodrm, ~n1n9 rm ond family ,rm home is buflt around a beautiful patio with filtnd sunlight aoCI spfoshiag fountain. Ponolling, dork ookliloon, wot bor, built.ins tlmaout, 3 ~If garage with additional space f~ di,,,. buggy or .boot.' ~ik sprinklers, basement, and storigo. tf.is .custom ho ... w .... built by archit.:Ct for his ow n fomily;Beycmt. Brand new lv8)l Wells' plen. l,l\XUfY livin_g at its best. Torrllic view of Upper Bay. 4 Bdrms, 3 baths & powder room, separate din· Ing rm, iamily rq> with wet. bar. & 21ld, fire- place. 19'<~2 S!W.kllng llOO.l. lq .I•n¥.P~d. sheltered patio. $108,400 Includes luxurious carj>etib.g; 1iiridsome wall paper, rronl'&11aUo landscaping. Immediate 0<cupancy. 'Call to- day. . .... , . . A fe"w choice View lots available. W11J.build· to su,it... · . , ... • IVAN WELLS Bi :soNS LIDO ISLE 1430 G•l•xy Drive (Opon D•lly! 646-1550 Roy J. W1rd Co., Exclusive Agents . ' . -~ . . The out ef town ownor has priced this liko-n.lw homo l~w for quick posseo;o" incl s1le. Enter large liviftCJ room thru sunny south patio. EnjOy Lido 'Isle's tennis courts, clubhouse on'd privoto beech from fhis cute '2 bodrln home on o 35' lot. Owner anxious and will help finenco, $56,500. Contoct Kon •ittinghom. General Sunken living r!~~~!.1 ~~~g:,oa~pol;!~f~mTiy rm. WeR £nJa J j/e 1000 •rranged and bHutifuRy docoratod 4 Bodroom, 3 bath hom o in immRulate condition. Lorge landscoped yord with separate dog PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES run. Jn,500.C.I Bin Bonts. CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEllROOM HOMES FROM $135,000,TO $500.000 EASY ELEGANCE .PRIME BUILDING LOT$ ' Step ·tkru tho 9•tod courtyoril into the gracious Del Piso tiled en-FROM $35,000 TO $17s;ooo try, onjoy t~ specious open' floor plan of this lovely Ivan WoRs BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR Baycmt home. 4 Largo Bodrms, Clining,rm'and family rm. Gourmelr_j~a!33!!!Do~v!!•!!r!D!•!;,!S!!u!!il,l!!o!"3-!,!!N!!.!!B!!.!!!!!!!642~-46!!!2~0 island kitchen to det.ght any hostess, $72,500. Gon•ral 1000 Ganoral BALBOA 'SLAND IAYCREST I Yearly Lome . An Immacil.late-f bedroo~ home in a lush, park-like setting, with arltpJe room for p:iol. 1-Bedroom &: bath has its own aeparate entry, &in. ny brealCtast area in kitch- en. Call. Jar app'l. · 4 BtClroom homo, just slaps to South Boy, furnished. Contact Jean Ritter. --Office Open Sciturdays & Sunc!ays 1 PETE B~~RETT REALTY t~ t ~ Westciff Drive Newport BeaCh I --------------------------I . G1no"I 1111 1-Fol . 1000 Gonoral i;;;;;;;;;;uoo.:;.' l;;;AT;;;;;ERF;:;;;;IO~NT~AP~hTMOO~. ~s ;;;; 1000 328 UDO NORD ~OW RoducJr to $115,000. Xlnt l•rms 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & ulillty room, with 85 ft. fronting on e.zcellbt swim- ming beach. Unlts are newly furnished. BILL G!lll_NDY, REALTOR 133 Don• Dr.1 Sulh 3, Nowport llHch · 642-4620 General ! 10001 Gonoral 1000 THE !"DUKE" I '. ofA£osta fllesa on .I>Oke ·Place that U:! ! 4 G'lant bediooms, walk to alf schooll, quitt cul-de-aac ~·t. A re~ "PALACE". Assume 5% fo . ~ Joan. $145 pei-mo payi all. Yea, sir! Fif for• KING! I, · c°tTs ~AL~CE REALTORS -..J5H<tiMIJ'1~ '(Qptn Evtnl"9a> • NEWPORT HEIGH'T'S OFFICE EXCLUS,VE 2 brm'1,.larp separate fam.. IJy room, 2 fire~ 1"% baths, -dlsWlce' "' all 1ehooi.. Low Int.treat b. 11umable ,loan. $31,900. l 3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS ASSUME 4.5°/o LOAN $117.00 PER MONTH * TAYLOR No qualllylng necessary to take over payments on this LINDA ISLE existi..Qg VA loan with annual Magnific:e:nUy deQgned home percentage rate o( 4 5% It w/5 bdrms, maid's rm, 5 has hardwood noors' tiUut-bas. spacious living&: dining Ins, Palos Verde sto~ fire-rm.s. Rumpus rm. F~. place, big rear yard, com-nn: opens to eanten .patto. pletely repainted in best !Ml Linda hie Open daily l.S Costa Mesa are~ Owner THE BLUFFS asking $25 500 c&u oow. Condo. Nice-3 Br, &:· bltn. $500 mOws 'veb In. range &: oven. Privatt patio. Perlcct tor couple. Exd!I· slve Newport area. $26,5(0. • 1000 I ' · 'l . Ocean View ·:-·DOVER SHORES .' Newport Heithts ' , · · ~ 3 ""'•BA hocn<, • • PRIME· LOT-LOCATION · ~ uYtng nn w/stot'lll fire. ' \ pl"" ~ "'"""' -.. i:i...: I . &eivlce porch, tXtwd ftoor1, Com~ of Goloxy. and Mariner quaUty erpts l drPs , dble I ~ 2 • ' gar., patios. $35-090 I • 3 ye1r fln•nclng 1v11l1ble or trede up for ln~ome proptrty. . ''" ' Phone 548-1936 ·or 644-4684 1860 Newport Blvd., CM NewPort He&fhfs 1210 :C::o:.;ro::•::•:..d::•::l..:Mo::::.•:_...;.111:::::;0 CAI,.!. 61<>3928 Eve•. 548-6'169 ==.;.;.;..;..;.;=.c;.,._;;.;,; ' = j __ · ~ NowportHoights OPEN DAILY 2·5 228 HAZEL "DR. "'Lease/Option NE;_AR CLIFF' DRIVE. On F.n,Joy the surf ·at' Little Cor~ Great • aedrmt 'decoi'atqr's" d ~ u !> I e Jot with large ona from thllJ cust. tiulll ho1nc 'in popll\~r M~ Verde peenil, I a r g e 'ln.ndsca~ home. , Camtirid~ Series with bOth fd prl~ate Pool. 2640 lq, ft. KLI dinin"' & family rooms, Own· 4 big Bedroom, S Baths, For-DON V. FRAN N • r.s ·REALTOR er moving north. $300 mo, mal Dining Room, Break t 0 673-2222 • room, Laundry room, 3-cnr -==~===== !Cfi ·S880 sized b'BJ'tlgC with power - (newcin11m1theltrt} opener, paneling decorator UEGE REALTY wall paper ... Lu.'Nrious uv. lSOOAdltns1tK1rbor,c:.a, ing on a Shady, Tree-Lined LIDO SANDS 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths, built-ins 126.500 George Williamson REALTOR Street. 546-2313 646-7171 ' THE REAL' 'K EST1\'.I'E~S 673-4350 64S-lS64 Eves. BY OWNER, 3 Br & den, $21 950 2 Ba, '"'"· "'1>•, nowly 1 redec., fenced back yd 3 Bdrm .• Family rm. w/access boat or trlr. &>e Bcau!iful! Entry hall, huge lo apprec, $24,500. 453 family rm. with fireplace, 21.,:T.;:usc:Lic.c• _____ _ baths, built-ins, intercom. NE W P 0 RT HE I G 1-1 TS 540-1720. rambling ranch 1t)'le 3 TARBELL 2955 Harbor Bedrm, 11hake roor, frplc:. LUSK EASTBLUFF $28.950. K!ngaud, R.E. REDUCED $1500 1 ,;Ml:;~2222~·===== Lgc 4 Br. 21Ai ba. Owner leav- ing cily, ~o \'icw call Oov•r Shores 1227 BY OWNER Balboa Penlnsul1 1300 WEST BAY AVE. Charming new 3 bdrm. 2 ha. MeditetTanean style; Block from oceap '& bay. Builder's home, top quality. Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr .. NB' 6U4620 VACANT -Nr. Tennis club, boat ramp, swim'g heh, 4 BR. 3 BA. den, frlpc, 40xJOO' tot. $55,000 Frank l\1lll'lhall Realty, 675-4600 Lido Isle 1351 Hunti~gton Beach 1400 FIXER UPPER NEED T.L.C. Brulically sound and needs only a handy-man and TEN- DER LOVING CARE. 3 bod. rooms, :l bath!!, separate family roon1 with BIG back yard, ONLY $2,000 down and Slli4 pays all. ANYONE QUALIFIES. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee Realtors 71i82 Edinger 842-4455 540-5140 ' ' ' '"ERITAOE. . ' ' REALTORS GOV'T REPOSSESSION Newjl!lrt, Vi$b Avail.able .fo l!Jlym>e .as l• wilb 'very low d o.w n paymenl a Large Bedrms,' crpts1 drPs, boat storage:1 Large covered patio. Full price only . ,19,- 650. Total ·paymenti $188·mo. pays all. • 546-1151 ASSUME' GI LOAN No qualifying with low ·down payment Large 5 Bedroom, ~ bath, 2 story 1114 family. Quiet Coata Mesa location, near South Coast Plaza. Owner i:noving -mw:t be sold. 546-llJl WEST CLIFF Sparkling 15X20 pool, charming 3 Bedroom and family. Top.tam· ily home. A realbuyl $45,650. 540-1151 BAR HARBOR Gracious homa for the executive w h o enjoys entertalnlng. C Spacious Bedrooms, large family and din- ing a~ea. 11TodQya kitchen'' with large breakfastarea.ltoorn for boat or tralle~ ) storage. OUtstand!ne value al $34.~. 540-llSl CONDOMINIUM Large Richmond mo- dcl 3 . Bedroom, 2 Bath .. Large dh!ing area., ·Tap ·1ocaUon .. • 22.650. WE HAVE OTHERS! 540-1151 KNOWN FOR SERVICE 2011 Br1sta1 ·n Costa Mesa 548-1151 OPEH EYDllllGS . : ' • • • • ·~ ., • ' ' ' .; ' ' • . " .. ' • • • ' • ! • . • • • . • . • . -• . • • • • • • ' • • • • • I } • • ... --..,... __ ,.. ...... ...-·-.... ... ..... ' ..... ~ ...... . . ~ . . . . .. . . ' " .. • • • . . . .. ........... ,. ... ••• , i• • " .. l " I I I ! I •. • • RENTALS RENTALS Apts. Uhfumlohtd _Ae!!-Unfvml....., 5200 N.wport a.adl 5200 ; t I S BR. 2 BA Fumlabll!d SlT!li BAYSIDE Vlll&P o. N Waterfront home, $400 mo. 8L 2 Br, 2 Ba. Carpets, 53&-314. 1toYe, ~. Adul•1 NOW 'RENTING .r 6'1H1911. • Belboo l•lond 2355 FOR ....,., New NorthbluU CHARMING 3 bedroom., Conclomhllwn. 3 BR, 2\t Ba JUST REDUCED bath·"°""· m """"'"'~ :!.;t~~ -::· FOR "'U. ICK Summer S250 per Wffk Sept . .-. ,. ,.Ol'!y 1..,. mo I"' ""· 3 BR. New """'~ crp .. , SALE -bl• qul•t IJm\ly drpo, .. 1r1g ovall Nr, -... t MalaiVl!! bedroom• + 26' fU4) ~ yr. md $225. 551.atm Jlvinl/ BeautUul new 2 BR. 2 bath units with quality carpets and dripe:1. Planned. for privacy + frplc., outside llvi!lg areas, pbol & recre•· tional !aclllUe$. Jn the heart of Newport Beach. Easy a~ess to shopping -beach - freeways . $275 to $300. 801 AMIGO$ WAY OPEN DAILY 1-5 (Olt Jamboree & Eastblu!f Road) llvl~ room Adorably dee-3 BR. 2~ ba. iown hOme. cntted 2 foll "'""' o.eam Huntington Beoch 2400 Swimm!"" t>OOI, l!llO month lcj~ Cozy brick tlre-Hal Pinchln Realtor l'f5.-t392 BOYD REALTY 644-1617 675·5930 ' pla 33, red tio NICELY Furn. 3 BR. 2 BA, --.... ~.to-~.-~ & home in Pacltie Sandi. $225 Newport H•lthts 2210 • merr1mac woods ~~ .........: .............. --vi'.._. mo. LE 6-3911. 675-5810 . 1-.;....'--~"-'---"- treeways, Step in Ii: take NEW 2 Br, 2 ·aa, tam, bl Ins, over exlltir« ~ "J'*Y.t· Summer Rent1l1 2910 ref. Grdnr lncl. Av. 5/1. meots. No qualUying, on -$300. 213: 459-1400. NR. new 2 Br, 1~ BA, Cf'J'bi, ::C::••:;l::•c;Mu;:::::;•,_ __ :.51;,:,:00 Huntington Beach 5400 Jut""' week. ''""" • "11 e WE HAYE e "Orange County'• Most Beautiful Apartment Community" ""'" 1\ove, dahwhr, gar. 962-5585 Over 25 dffferent University_ Park 3237 -,...,_, .. ., l.n4en M .. ..r.. '166 W. Wibon, 00-7958 • SIN"•ES FRCM 1140 LRG 2 BR. 'niplei. Prlv ua:. LAGUNA BEACH 4 BR. tnwnmu.. ...... $340 FEATURING A CLUB ATMOSPHERE patio. Crp\s, drpo, bltna. No e 2 BR Ill BA FROM $225 ON BEACH! 19131 Brookhunt Hunlington Beach SUMMER RENTALS 3 BR, townhouae ...... $28S pe\5. IJJS mo. ""'1867 e 2 BR ~BA FROM S"'1 By w .. k or month 2 BR. townhouse •••••• .$275 • COMFORT & PLEASURE SU> • 3 BR 2 BA rnoM $360 $21,950 MISSION REALTY 3Bdnn,houso .......... $>10 FOR YOUR '!R.Nunf\U'n. J ""s~t Cupe.....,.pe>dl.twuher eCLOSE TO BEACH• e 494-0731 e 4 Bdrm. hou8e .......... $315 call~ oann t. . heatei:I pQOJ-IO.una-~ennls s Bedrm., tamUy nn I" WVELY LIOO SA ND s • Red Hiii R•alty L h la d I h 35 fl P' T kr t f I'-b bbl' rec niorll.ocean vicws-batti., ffttplace. New 'paint HOME 1 bUr: to heh 3 Bdrm Univ. Park Center, ll'Vlne us n scapin9 wt . 1ne r.ees, spar ing wa er a 111 u 1n9 5200 patiDt;aq'IPle park.inn. wide&: out Boat door, lge 2 Ba Pool July $200 · wk Call Anytime maoo streams and serene ponds make Merrimac Woods the place to live. ~port a.ach Socurlty guardil. pa"-, asaume low lntereat Ana ~. wk. 5105 Bruce -I 1' 32•• Th d 8 d 2 8 h f • h d f • h d B'A..-ONT FURN. also Avail. ~ -·-_ e11 I an 2 1 room, et , um11 e or un urn1S e apulmenls 1 r1< HUNTINGTON V•oant, .,,.,,..C 548-9404 N•wport _rv_n_•------2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apl,, BRASHEAR REAL TY Bch. FOR Lease by Owner. New feature: Prlv. terrace, elevators, su~ PACIFIC 847-8507 Eves: 642-0t27TY ',,,o,EL9UXE/15 2 S3B75R. Apt. homec. • BdR, ',"A1. Fxam • A1'r"'ondit1'oning •Self cleaning ovens Pooltcrranean" pk'g • .a~,_ e,1~,· ru OCEAN AVE .. H.B. RARE OPPORTUNI -. mo. rm. pts, rps, rp c. Ira ""-" ' Ml wa.tl!T', UV<;JU>. .u <n.t.) 536-1'87 4 Bednn, 2 bath. Auume 5%. Westcllff area. 642-Q74 large garage. Landscaped. e Beam ceillngs e Dis~washers W. Coalt Rwy, Newport, ~""!~~'.""..,""!'.':"'"I G.J. loan &: $15.1 per mo. NEWPORT Island • 2 Br, Pool, rec & clubhouse pl'lv. _642-:.=,"'12=-~~-=-2 Br. 2 Ba deluxe apt. Bll·iri pays all or low dn. &: owner sleeping pon:h, priv. dock. $315 mo. Water pd. 833-2311 • Private garage with stor191 • Elevators i 3 BR. 2 BA. 1 blk to range &. ~shwasher, crpt, wDI help finance. Newly dee. $225 per wk. Call 879--2001 aft s wkdys, anytime wknds. • I oe· Therapeutic pool • Swimming pool beach. $26$ mo. Yearly. Call drps, gar. I Walking dist. orated inside &: oul. Only RENTALS 613-2455 Hunt. Ctr.· Chlldren Ok. No $71900 Corona del Mar 3250 • Bor-Be·Ques •Saunas ,.:;,;...::=-~-~-~ ~ Real Eat•t. Mart Hl!°"~'~"~U~nlu!!!m!!!!l•!_!h~ed~. I ~7;::-;:';;7;;:"7;;:--::";; • 2 BR. New paint, crpts, pets. $160. 8t5-56511. -LARGE 3 Br, 2 Ba South drps, refr:lg avo.il. Nt. beach. CHEZ ORO Apts, 8234 AOan-147~1 Gmeral 3000 ot hwy. AV&ll Ma, ht: 1325 and 1 lovely Clubhouse with ·Social activitieS: yr rnd, $225, 551-B«X> ta New 1-2-3-BR. priv. T d Strikes mo Jeaae 615-3595 garages. Pool. u t 1111 y w .... "!1~;! old 3 Bednn SHARP, c 1" n, """"' . • ADULTS PLEASE FROM $145 to $210 EHi Bluff 5242 = or "1&-:m7 1" Ba. 11x11 enclosed pa'. painted. Rent at Sl.85. Costa Huntington Beech 3400 PRESTIG.£ LOCATION !='="'=-,,~.==~~~~ Ito D!lx: custom.._ crpts Mesa area. Walk to shop. H bo Bl··• N N bo d F I do! '1l1\111 .. AITRAC. 2 BR. $130. 3 BR. • ......,., . · ping Check our RENTAL 4 BR. 2 ba, fa.m . rm, fenced Just l•1t of 2600 ar r wu., e1r • rs Ca ill1c or eue, wi:e sq. "-· $1 75. Now avail. Pool. Kleis Anyone may take over vast. BOOK yd, gardener. 17421 Lido Ln. 425 MERRIMAC WAY COSTA MESA f BR, 2~ BA apt Frplc, ok. 11401-A Keelson Ln. ~ VA Jh!Tl!".,~'..!2"11y1 To-WE SELL A HOME ""' staler • Edwards. • <h'apes, crpts, wet ""· prl H.B. 008_;1510, 847-7446. uu mon Y. o 'I'"" ng. EVERY 31 MINUTES $350. 841-6651 54r L30Q balconies, dbl garottkltchen G BRASHEAR REALTY w lk & .L NR 3 BR. I BA Crpt ;rv dahwhr,dbloven,Pool.Conv HUNTIN TON Bay Condo. "'"""' Eve" 642-042'1 a er ee .,,,::i::. bltn!, dbl • .;,.. T~ EVERYTHING NEW -MOYE IN NOW ! Jo lhop'g IChl• A ..,....t1on, Adul1'. 3 BR. Wshr/ • .,.,.. hid .,~ A ~· ~ Only $350 mo. Pool. $185. 536--2212, GT~ DELUXE DUPLEX Real.... c ~ -· v oow. --' 635 Ami"°' WaY, NB Santa Ana 5620 BRAND NEW 1-3 BR 1-2 BR 2'190 Harbor Wvd. at Adams 3 BR, twnlue, elec wW I Mgr. next door 86.5 Amlp. Fireplaces, carpet•g' & drs~ ~ Open 'til 9 PM = ~f~t ::e·~1t;; S TOWNHOUSE -Ntw lrg. ;;;;;;,;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;,;;~I ~ ... built-Im, 1\l b1k to LOVELY 3 "' home, 2 Ba. , • . RENTALS REANTA\ I hod RENTALS Co•lo MeH 5100 2 BR. 2\1 Ba..,, frplc, •ncl VILLA MARSEILLES beacbl $45,500. din rm, pvt patio oll master Fountain Valley 3410 2 pts. Fuml1Md pft. um.! ---_ _:"""-;,:,:;;:;...;F..;u:;.m:;.1:;;•::.hed:::.. __ ---------gar, patio. 675.0033 BRAND NEW LINDBORG CO bd,m, family patlo,1:...:==:....:..="---'= General -Newport Beach 4200 Bolboo ltland 4"5 FAIRWAY 2 BR. lrpk. A""' to pool. SPACIOUS 2579 ' Hawaii.an tea house, frpl, HOME For Leue, by owner. Adults. PJI) mo. 541HK77 or 1 & 2 Bd Apt ~ w/w crptlng, drps, blt·IM, 3BR, 2%,BA. Cpts, drps, -----·-------------BOAT allp I: 2 Bdrm. 644-5516 -rm. s, 1~~!'!!:!!!'!!:!!~~~!'!!:!!'1 •~ ml lo beaob. !>;tl mo. ""'plaoe, b"ill-lns, db I 2 BR • 2 BA Newport Beoch Gange Apt. 1 S.lh. $350 VILLA APTS ===-=====c F~~~I~ LJ~\:~n. Fountain V•ll•Y 1410 549-0371 before S; 968-4076 garage. Landscaped. Nr Furn-Unfurn, Blt-lns incJ.ud. Bill Grundy Realtor 642-4620 • Corona del Mar 5250 Dishwasher _-color coordlnal· 1;..;;,;;;;~"-:::-:-'"-=::7-::-l.!alt~e:,rr~6c..,.=----acbools. Avail June 1. $2SO lng dishwuber ' ref:rir. Air GRANO iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiii NEW 50 / DN I LAKEFRONT Lak F l mo M2--2035 eves H ti......., Be ....1... ,.,._ Private patio, pool • lndiv. ed appliances • plush shag -10 •• • e ores cond. Dining rm. Swimming un ......... •'"" --laundry lac. carpet • choice of 2 color s .l 4 BR. Custom homes new 2 br, 2 ba, fish\~, 4 Br, 2 Ba, Fam. rm. Frplc, pool, Pool table. Only 8 apta Near Orange Co. Airport .1r; ,.. • schemes • 2 hath!'I • stall readyforoccupancy.Loaded boating, pool, teruilil, $350 crpt, bltins. Lrg yd. S265 ln complex. Nr. Disneyland. OPENING STONEHENGE APTS UCI Adul on1 ~ st?owen ,; mirrored ward· w/ extru! From $31,200. mo. 494--8463 Mo. Kids OK. 43()..2459, 2048 Sprague, M&r. Apt '-2 Br, 2 Ba, cWiwhr, pool, ' ts y. Q,, o,..,. robe doon • indirect light. Deal w/ builder & save! $115 Compl redec 3 br, r/o, 592-5625, 842-212l SJ4..6996, billiards. Furn. or u:ntum. 20123 Santa Ana Ave, lng in kitche!1 -breakfast Cor. Lu Florrs & Pheasant Chlre~!: nuk. wA/w. & ~· 4 BR.. Blma, crpts, drps, HOLIDAY PLAZA IMMEDIATE $155 • $185. 232) Florida. Mgr, Mrs. bruce su..3894 ON TEN ACRES bar • huge private fenced Ave. Call 531..o385. ...., ,, o cttve, .DA.I . trplc, b1k wall lncd yrd. DELUXE. Spacklus 1 Bdrm ~2730. 1 & 2 BR. Furn .l Unfum patio -plush 1i.nuscaptng • A-FRAME W/BONU5 """"1 $240 mo. 968-2'190 Furn apt SJJS Pl"' "ti!. 2 BR. Adults oruy. Util pd. LUXURIOU$-NEW FlttpJa,.. / prlv. patlm / briok ""·B-Q" · W>e h<at· ~i:.~u~~lgr:yt ':ts..bl:m~:!'m.2we~m:~ Laguna Niguel 3107 ~~a:J:~·__a:>i:e~· OCCUPANCY r ~~~~· 17676 ~;e~:~:~~ ed3{0)15s!.18":i1~tol St. Wik to ochoob. $35,"'1 "' Bl"" Beocon, 64>-0111 Bkr. VIEW Of"""""""'· 3 "'· ' 1965 Pomona. C.M. Quiet Adult Living <MaOArtbta nr CoHt Hwyl <%Mi. N. 'or So. C<>a.<t PlaD) $Dl mo. leue. 962-5869 5 Bl( 3 Ba. Near beach, Ba. 2 yr lease. ReferencH Lrg Rlection of Apts. LmurJ prden apmrtmentl Lagun• Beach 4705 1 .... 2 b h 2 swim _1_ ATTRACTIVE 2 brm apt. Santa Ana w/fabulous ocean view. _.,.•d, Owner 496-3494 eves Furn & Unf. From. 175 otferina eo'mpltt., p1'{8ey, ---------• -~ PHONE ·. 557 -oo '"' be ~ ..... •----...1.. .. Adul'· 0-•., · -·-•d111..f..tful qulet setting. ~~~~~~~·~·~~I S.nt. An. 1620 • .,...,, Mo. f!H.5488•, 6'1S-8800 or write P.O. Box 427 Dana Bi"e Be•-• 64""111 Bkr. aU...u.\U ....._.....,,& • ,. 111'' ...., ~-Llfi" ...,._ .. ---. -., 1 BR Apt; ~ Bleeplno rms. 'lM A·-do St C M Close to beaoh, built.-lns and. r::::::_-------·1:=======:'.::':I Point, Cat 92629 unparalleled recre.UonaJ ·~ ""' .""a .. . -faclllU 1 try Util pd. Free TV &: radio. See Mgr on pre:mlses l'!:I. Adults, no pets $190. DRIVE BY 2713 W . Co1t1 Meta 3100 NEW 3 BR 2 BA family 8 n a coun 2200 So. Coast Hwy. (Behind K-Ma:i t off Harbor Call Mrs. Casey Ag I. Laguna Beach 5705 HARVARD ST. SANT A borne. frpl, W/w cptg, drps, Costa Mesa 4100 club atmoepherT. Now Bachelor or Single apts, La· at corntt Rutgers & Avocado) 673--4841 • 6~ ANA • and ste a real LGE 4 Bedrm & fam, 1% bull tin kitchen, d In et I e , iiiiiiiiiijiiiijiijiiijiiiiiii lea.sin a In Newport Beach. guna Bch, Low Weekly. Rat-Day 642-3535., eve 645-0283 l or 2 BR for rent or lse, w/w cptg, drps, oct'an view, undergrnd pkg, close to very nice beach. 494-9633 or 494--1441' Mt, Brach. "cream-",3Bedrm,1% BA home In Co11ege Park. be>"t. land.,•ped, large HARBOR, Mode~oponl0 amto8pm e.. From$28wk.494-7'll ORLEANS APJS. BA. heavy shake roof, huge $250 mo, Avail ~1-10. Call fenced yard. Avall, June 15. Rents from $1!54310 RENTALS kitchen. C!'(>la, drps hdwd Ray Gault. Heritage Real $250 mo, yr lse. 494-8964 fin. 20x25 garage. Lie Esta~ 540-1151 (open eves.) RENTALS TOWNHOUSE Furnished or unrumlshed Apta. U~mltfttd ADULTS ONLY ya.rd. 81i7~i~;, 2 BR House, water A trash Apts. Furnlshtd Oakwood General 5000 2 .r. 3 BR. Avail. Private pa- wamer o iew, ' pald. $160 mo. ls!, last &·I --'-·------2217 Harbor near Wilson -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;] tio, pool. lndiv. laundry l&c. 549-3642. $50 depDI!!. Adulta & children General 4000 • 1 BR. 1 Adult. No pets • (Nr. Orange Co. Airport; Tua- San Clemente 1710 Ok. Avail now. ~Lillian •Heated pool, Near shop'« Garden VEN DOME tin at 11th St; nr. WestcllU). Pl, CM. 548-1939 s·ngle center. roR ....... ' Br. 11-I Apartments lm ""'""· eo.1a M ... LOVELY Beach Restdence. 2 ea, fenced yd, trplc, crpt,' $6 NIGHT & UP ~~V~1 Mgr. Mn. Carlon. 6'2-46fl 2 Story, 4 Br, 2 lull 2 drps, nss mo. Avail May Ad I $30 WEEK & UP SECTIONS AVAILABLE half "'""· Pvt .• ,,,.,, ,..., Call .,,.,. •· PM U ts sruom & 1 BEDROOMS 1100 16th s1r .. t c1 hopp1 p k HARBOR GREENS beach. Mag. vlew. $69,500. 54S--35.l6 OH to I "'' ., < 87l"'300 by TV & Kitchenettes lncl. * Specious 3 Br's :I Ba GARDEN & STUDIO APTS Owner en l. "EASTSID~=~E-,~B-R-bom--,,-1rg Linens & maid ser ~ 714: 642·8170 * :J Bedrooml ' appl "-·-· Chil•-• _ _.,.._ Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. trom SllO. · yard, bltm. $190 mo. Incl. .......,...._, 7 single, 1 & 2 bed· 1.1.1 .,ns pet ...,.;uvo• * Swinf Pool, PuVll'ffft 2100 p C SUPER PAD! Plw;h, cozy 1 BR apt nr beach. Crpts, trplc., ba.lcony, stv I retr. PX! mo. util pd. 613--1963 NEWER 1 BR. beam ceilgs. All bltnl. Crpts, drps. Gar. Adults. $165 lse. 67H635 OCEAN '1'RONT new luxury apts, 2 Bk, 2 BA. Adults, no pets. 497-!661 Bal boo 5300 San Cltmt~te 5710 ' 2 BR a: den, ult!. Incl., lyr --------UNFURN.-BALBOA ts.. req. St!; l b•. forn. New, Lci\\-er duplf'x. 2 BR. 2 $100. Alter 4, 4~2-1971 ha. & den. Near ocean. 'R..,E"°A~'""L 'E°"S"T°"A"'T"'t.'""' -- $350 Month General Bay & Beach Realty Inc. --.__.. ----- 901 Dover Dr., Suite 126 NB 645-2000 Eves. 64&.fJOOl Rentals Wanted . --5990 LOVELY Residence 2 story, uW. Furn. avail. Children room apartment.Ii, furnish-2376 NEWPORT BLVD. 1 bik from bay or beach. * Frpl, lhdivl1ndty fac'll 546-03?0 eterson Way, .M. 4 BR, 2 tull 2 hall baths, ok. 615--1513 ed and unfumlsOOd, with 541-9755 3 Br, :J Ba & den. Avail 1145 Anaheim Ave, RESPONSIBLE coup<e will Pvl access bee.ch. Mag. -~~~~----1 oomplete pt1vacy -~ •-00 for v.sr leue .. -•. May ~~· MESI\ 642 ....... BEAtrr. 3 Br, 2'ii Ba 1tudio. Huntl~.to_n Beach 5400 rent furnished houlll! or ·"ew $69,,00. ~.-, $110 • 1 BR Duplvt.-Frplc, ......... • .,-.... -'-U,,,,.. ·"o.M --·-v• vw•"' 1 frig Iovel , _ _. scaped country club atmos-Furnished :&h. 4. $l50 mo. 615--4630 or ~~~~~~~~!'!' Blbul, new crtpl, drps It apartment with 2 or ~ore '114-871-9300 by app't. s ove, re ' Yr....... phere includlng -.ooo VILLA POM NA &U-2253 ew1. BWT Wbite, ::; paint. , Ab9olute barpln! NEW 1 Br, l blk bcb $130, bedroom~. close to oetan -=========I Blue Beacon, 645-0111 Bkr. ""''""' 11'" furn Qtm:r & PR! fro J J 1· " A • ~ worth ot recreational tacll· from $140. Rltr. ask for Mn. Joy Costa Mesa 5100 $180. 998 El Camino Dr. .., · -. m u Y :itra to ug . .,.., Capistrano Beach 1730 EASTSIDE • 2 Br, frpl, beam itlell designed Rn,· operated ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS. BACHELOR, l & 2 BR. <or 546--0451 VATE. Patlo, gar. Adi! G. Davis P.Ot Box 1021 , l---------I clgs, priv patio, adults only. just for single people, f ) crpt d ti ---·-----sngles & cpb, No chldrn or Beverly Hills. $152. 642-8520 A~ ~e;:, ~s ~L bitrui. sS 14b~$~as;: • MARTINIQUE • Beaut. ; B:i,~~~ ~ studio pets. 2{]2.A 14th. SJ0.1319,c ·-0u-P-LE~-,.,-.,h-e-,-t0-,,,-,1 Qutet area m" nu Marina CuWn 3 Bd 3 Ba + guest rm w/kitchen. Nu carpet & decor. $36.900. 49&-3.177 $145 • 2 BR Home. R/O, Rents From w. of Nwpt. betw 11th & 18th SeacllH Manor Apts, 1.5l5 Park-Lib Surroundings apt. Bllnll, new crpts, drpt. 61.c>-c:1c:784:.;·:_-----clean room y.•/kit. priv. or fncd yrd for children, gar. ...,,..,..,..,,~.,. .... ~,.I Placentia, NB. DELUXE 1-2 ~ 3 BR APTS. locked gate tor ReCUrity. 998 NEAR Huntington J~arbor · housekeep~ room. ll!r. Blue Beacon, 645-0lll Bkr. $145 to $ 300 ~ Pool Util Pd -ME"'S_A_M_O~T~E·L-ALSO FµRN. BACREl.OR El Camino Dr. 546--0451 Triplexes. Quiet. area. Ltg Freeman 642-4498, Box •-AITRAC unl/lum 3 B SPAC. Attn.c. ' . Prv patioa e Htd Pools ---------1 l & 3 BR. n40 & up. Pets, P1D5, Daily Pilot .-.. r, Garden Llvtna. 1 Br. $145 *LOW "~Y RATES* 2 BR Stud\ 1" ha ok "" ' D I I •-le 1975 2 Ba Twnhse ba1 tlo Immediate Occupancy 2 n.i:.i:.n.w Nr ahop'i • Adults only · 0 ap!, n · children · (.u.i) :i92-26:J3, NICE Fullv furn. 3 or 4 up exes or ~ • c, pa • & up, adult.II, no pets, Kit-"-• 'IV'•, maid .,,..•-. Encl ti N •-1714) .,. •= ' pool !mmed --~•1 Mo, to l\fo. LPa·e Avail. 11-pl t I u..:: . ., """"' 1177 Santa Ana Ave., CM gar, pa O. ew crp... ~" BR "·--opt. Ne"~rl , • -.--· :JQO-_... • BR. i:., c or paren w H•ated Pool. -bl'-11•• Day ·~ "' ~ k. )-w·"· u-Apt 113 • ,,A,,U:A.. ,,..,... u•. ...... s ' BR. ~a W/ 1 -le-·· C'l are • I I CdM. 2 houses, garden,~ 3 BR. C.ondo. 2 BA. ANAHEIM yng adult o """ ...,...ce 646-91!81 ..... ~ S42-35)4 ev@t 546--0689 • ....,., ~· ""'"" 1• a o .. yry ease. $55,CUI. $100) down. Shag crpts. Drps, bltns. Ave & 740 W. 18th St., EL CORDOVA ' · $150. Patio, pool. 14i ba. }lave own business In area. Bkr 6'lS-(jOM, 60--8223 Immed. Occup, 54&-6194 2T1 So. Brookhunt Cf.I. DELUXE 2 Br. WestcllU loc. Brand new de:lux apbl, IJ>l.C-1 BEDRM. garqe_ Stove & 818.1 Gatiield. 962-899-t 673-8870. RENTALS 2 BR. encl. pr, nke. yrd. (1 blk. So. of Uncoln) VILLA MEPrlSA AP. rs •. ,. ~-"·-~.ti;':~ :!,uJta $22), k>us, 1 & 2 Br: swimming ref'rig. Adultl only. No pets. I ='=~==-=~==-~======== I I-•~ c 1n4l -·~ tiO "-~ -~· poo1 b-........... ree ball. These $100 mo. Apl E, 577 Santa An• 5620 I Santa Ana 5620 HouHI Fum ..-.-No pets, no children. pl .,......,,_, 2 BR Fum, .• pa , e WINTER RENT''•• ' ~- ncl d Chll,. ~ are the btat In the area. See Hamilton. 548--6954. over •5 pref. 5'l8--0401 pool, 2 care gar. ~-ABBEY REALTY G1nerol 2000 GARDEN GROVE ren welcome,"' pe\s pleue! •"'" -~e lh<m at "117 Charle, ...,,. •• LGE 3 BR l~ BA bltns M D I M 3105 $185 ~ er John & Louise Sellen, ,.· d ' d-•-L N ' l ;;-;;;--:-~;-:;;:1,LC';;~I~~·~·~·~ e ar 13100 Chapman Ave. mo. Cl'P , l'J*, a11111111 . o $110 _ util pal d. Cozy <4 blkl w. Santa Ana Fwy,) 719 \V. Wili!On. * &t&.1251 l BR. Blk Ocean-SQ. Frpl, 646-21l8. pell. 2 ch!Jdrn ok. Nr acbll. Bachelor apt nr Frwy. 4 BR. 2 Ba, home: wlll cntJ 636-3tOO *WEEKLY* patio, lndr)'. 1 adult, no *STUDIO APT.* _54.>J215 _______ _ Actlft, Bkr. 5,3.4..-69111. leue/optlon_ Owner/agt. Lovely apt, Bachelon ·or pet. $ll5 yrty. 613-'1629 • 2 BedroOn>. • ~ -.~ ·-E FURN baeh f --• e l" •-th * DELUXE l & :J BR $135-:I BR Triplex, avail v•...-o<>UV ____:-'-=". ~ NEWPORT BEACH cpll, ~ cok mpl. ly _ U ·-~l',.1• e ..... ~~ • Adnul-ts 0_,., Garden Apt1. Bit-Ins, priv. now, k1da Ii: pets we.loomed. Newport Beach'SlOO 880 IRVINE AVE. Kitchenette1. ...., w -pays ....;, =~·cu ........,, no coo...... • Heated P'oo't patio, heated pool •• trplc. A " ·-Bkr c ... __. all. 998 El c.amino Dr. 01~ Ad"it• 11•• mo •~5163 c ... , • ....,........_,, IRVIl'lE AND 16th SQ&--0451 J..,\RGE 1 Bdrm near Ocean. 102-I MiMion Dr., 0.f '" · · ~ Rentals to Shire 2005 DOYER SHORES (714) 64>-0560 ; BR, ' °'· "'""'" uv1,,. ~~ .~"'· Stud••" 540-9008 '4Q.1"9 ~~Ei:,1·'BR.11!511•11111. Enjoy a moun~in View & South Bay Club room, trpl, balcony, no i ml 1-"'=-"==:..·~~~~ IMMACULATE 2 BR duplex. 241 Avocado * 646.m'l9 EMPLOYED lady w\&hes to poolskie Uvlng in thls spao-children $180 mo. Avail May 2 BR. FUm Apt. Pool. No Blt-ln ovtb and raJl&e. Drps. shaft 2 bedroom Costa .Sous 5 bedroom home. All Apartments 1st. 1255 Bakel'. 540-0896 children or i:ets. 2405~ 16th new cpta. Garage. Fenced NEw Dlx 1 .l 2 br. Sha: crpt, Meta apartment 'With same. electric radiant heat; l'ii REMARKABLY eves" wkndl. SI., NB. 646--4864 yd. Gardener .l wale.r pd. drps, bltM, lmmed. t)CCJ>. One child OK. 551--9796 after baths. Walle-in wet bet. 3 UNBELIEVABLY $30 PER WK. & UP COMJ'ORTA8LE Bach.. apt, Adulta, no ptts. $145 mo From StSO. 540-197!. st5-232l a p.m. car t1ectrlc caraae. All on EXTRAORDINARILY B.'lehe1ot & 1 BR, htd pool, ideal for ntlttd or middle-+ security Mpoait. Avail * LRG 2 .\ 3 BR. 2 Baths, WORKING girt w1Jbet to 190 ft. deep lot. Owner pays BEAl1TIJ'UL mtJd aervle. K'ltcberw I qed man $10. 613-446S 1tfay 1st. 54~ aft .5. frpfc, bltnl, crpl1, dflis. abaft Bay VP •· with pool A: garden malnltnance. Val D'lsere G•rden Aph 'IV avail. 450 Vktoria (N"r. VACATION! Wowre • Vaca-BRAND new • excitlng l Encl pr., pttlo. 546-1034 _ $50 monthb'· 615--4399 Avall June 15th on an an-Putting green. walerfaU .l c"c::":."':;.:;'>:;,· -=-==..--tiont Nice 2 BR. 'IC'Hf\front. Br, beam ctUaa, sh( crpti, 2 BR. l~ Ba, ftdec Dsbwhr, or m.-4651 nua.i ltaw; $100 Month. stre Oowen evtl')'Whe SUS CASITAS Ma)' l.JUD! l. $DI. M2J2J5 pMl'a, trtilc, prlv pallo, paUo, Pr. Adults, $1G_ Nt. WANT: wrtdnc itrt to ihare MACNAS.IRVINE cs·~. rec. room, b~ FUm. 1 BR Apts. Adults ~y~-crt.bl~ul~a nn: 19th I. Pomona. 54M3.57 = J::: a~:ne:-1tb m1cY ~fJii! ~~Q;1,8~':; =:n= ~:,~~Newport Bilbo. 4300 :~s:n.~ w, Bay. i::!u-~. 1.!~· A= BAOfELOR will aha.re lrg .,rm Dover Drivt, Suite lZ $135. See It! 200l Panom BAOIELOR Apl $6T.50 l --------c::.:..=~:.:..:=---no peta. $135 mo. 646-1762. •ttrac. home with view. (71 4) 675-321~ Rd., 64UG70. Oet~n Har. & 2 BR. Trtn. $90 l up. 1 BR. utU pd, $125 mo. 2 BR. Unturn. Newly dee. 2 BEDROOM Overlooking Mutt «oe to a.pprec. 646--6ll2 1080 Baytlde Drive bor &: Newport. 2 BUr N. l9th S48-9STT or 60-00. !33 E. Adultll, no pets. 310 E. New crpb: & dtpe. Spae Golf Courw. $UO a month. l~~=:::=-==~~,~~~N•;w~"°';rt~Beo;:;ch;..~1 RENT FURNITURE !Gth SJ., QI, !~:::-:.~~.':'':.' •vall ~~ •,t1s;i:,pe:,;,l1:. 646-6677 bel.,. ! pm Costa Mne 2100 TOWNHOUSE; 3 BR.. 2% J l BR new, betlut. f\lnl. until Junt 28th. noo ma f}farbof tutn. w. on ** 1 BDRM, middle ag«), 1---------1 BA. trplc. patio. pool, 2 3 RoorN from $19,M :0 J:.e:"mo~'!.e~nl.Y· cl;:•d;,,:util~. "'675-,=:1!;=."3=== WlllOtl). WUJOn Gardens rtftttnces required. 23:11 JUNE to Nov. FUn1.. house. CflJ' pr, all bltn1, crpta, Month to month Rcnlall · --. ----Aptl. , _E_lde_n _A_v<_. ____ _ No pell: or ~hlldren . drpl. IM $275 mo. 811~ \Vlde Selection FURN. Bllcbelor Apt., CM. •••l BRAND N~ • b:dtlng 2 3 BR .. 2 Bath, Ira nn1, 'Apl)fOYl!d nJettnea only or 642--2491 evn or wlmd1. 100~ PUROtA-'1-~ OPTION Utll pd. $90 mo. Lido Isle ....,., Br, beam Cellp. shg crptg, nr OCC. Walk to 1 Shop's. $IJO mo. 2146 CoUtp, 0.1 nENTAU-Poo Is Id Cl or 24 ht, lkllmy ·~-· Pftn'le, prtv petto, pool,~. Children o1r:. $179. 5.'IT-61.~ 2 mt.. pr., palJo. Quiet t. 2 a: 3 BR apt.II Cus!om Furniture Rental J BR, w/w, drpa, dee atovt, l BR. Util pakt. Guqe. bl~. aand volleybs.11 crt. 2 BR APT. fenced yd~rple, ma,-4.1~"' ..Af"'Hm••h Spani1h Style luxury l ~I BNroomt ,.,,.,.,.. •M l/rt.J,.r,.JaA.4 . "'"" u.u.., O..Jfl1 n.1 c.-,.,_ •• n r.,w11,.. Badd,.. l111lerior De6p .,. .... "' ,.,.,'7 & CIOI ... Priffff D.t• •l'lfl Bal~m.1 Ab COIUlldnn#!fl £"'°1 to•r (M,. Ptl'I!•• Sr. HNIMI PooZ.-eolor TY Anl~n11• l'IOVJ Ren tins-from $1 W /•If rY1111A of ,S..,.,111 Co.11t rt- 1000 II'. MocArllrnr Bl•d. -,-lil«lt F.11•1 "' 81r..tr>1 .Stmln Ana .'i4fl./1497 II ~ 8t'lttna for adul ' 1-.nble, $250 up. A(l, Sl f W. 19th, CM. ~81 rt~ Nt 1tt>pl center. •1 adult. No' pet.. $175 mo, Adult.t. no pets. Slim. 381 Cl'Jll, dr'p.!. $150 mo. Call )tllr-f185. Ml -. ~ ' 1568W1,""ln, Anhm 174-281\0 $!", DI C.nt" fl' ,.ar1y, m<J83Tews. I W, Bay. 646-0073, m.7629 ~837.:....;"'9;.i::.;.-----, ____ ...., __________ +- ··~-------------!-.. ____ ---------------'--------------· - SIYR tAIH! - c L A 5 5 F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 -7 8 I • BBST 11111? -------------------------------~---- ' • lllHTALS c!li-illl!l--li!lll ... llljl--ipl-lm!IJ"'1tEAL ESTATE AH.NOUNCEMEl'ITS T Afi!': ~rnlthtd _ 'It' * '1l1_0'-'o"'no"'"r1"'-1..---~•~ Not1 __ c.,.1s..,.... __ Rontol1 Wonted 5lt0 lndu,trli l Rontol .oto l'ound Cl'rol Add' - RENTAL l!El\VICE p,.. to Landlords 111 .......... -......,-CM e LANDLORDS e FREE RENTAL SEl\VICE 8"'ktt 534-8982 t .... * New 3800 aq tt. -Nff'port Beach * * l'OU~Q:,W•illl'f"l'lf~•bout $383 mo. 6-3 m&. 'Ud: 'vie.· Chl;pnuan ·1485 lr-8rookhunt, G a-rd "n Grove. Call &. ldtntify. 6100 842.'/UT CdM FOUND,: v;.. SOth & When Yo.u ant if clone right • , • Room• fer Roni 5995 _____ ,;.:;._=:: CHEERFUL Room le bath overlooking ocean S20/wk. • Nicely decorated qµiet bldz, 1ull(leck & kitchen priv. 1289 s. C.OUt Hwy, Lasuna Bea~ 4.94-$)17 ~ 8lk Beach. 1 •dJ R-l Seashore, N.B. &Qld tot:i + an ine, hit,· Act· =tch. Owner identity. ~-DOC • B!Qnde W/brown ~ R-3 Lot San. Clemente-. 6 ears, lcmale, part Wi re- Whaddy• Want? Wh1ctdy1 Got? bl"' from SUmmer }Vhil& Hair II't-rrlu, fo\md at S.A. Call one of tfie experts listed _below!!. SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR ltoust. near aou course. Country Club. 544-2780 no.soo. Call 64~m. -· NATURAL BORN SWAl',ERS COAL bla<k mo!Mr '" •13 SERVICE DIRECTORY Special Rite' Lota 6100 =O EutbluU !'rt a. GUEST House w/ priv. ba .. turn. Laundry priv, New, clean. Nr OCC. $75. 50-8638 5 Lin .. -5 1111Mi -5 IMlcb 1;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;~J~~~:::-:==-~= Ironing '75$ '"'" -AD MUST •.a.u0< IM•RQY.ED LOTS P,.,.,r;plion gtuui o" Ceo-Btby'sitting eves. '-Miit "" n.w to """' a.-NMt-~ " 1r-. ,-•a• St • -'--·na Be h HOME & APT Cleaning lRONlNG Jn my home, l5C :t-'l'OIJJt .,_ •rt0/0r . .o«tsa. •-a •11e1 ., MY•l"llti& . . • • ~ ... ~.. • ac , gray CH LD ""-. .., L ~OTHINOFOttlALl!-T1tA0110N1.v1 For Sale 6 f\llly Improved frame w/ &Old. 494-8285 I \.&re in my· home. BY DIAMOND each !or moat pieces. NICE fu'\f•: pleaaant hm, ad loc. Kit. priv. $,.1.5. 548-5998. w kd y s 8: 304, To Place Your Tr1der't P1radlN M loti in prime loc ol Cerritos. PAIR 01 ~ption glimes Mother o1 2 will care for 187 2ht St., Costa Alesa 646-1082 aft 1 pm. PHONE 642-5671 Cloat to A.rteaitl Fwy" ear. 4/16 in• I ' Infant • 5 Yl' old. Good ~=-='-'o"~'-""'o--'-= .. .;'.:..--JAPANESE ironing. $1.25 ··-Al 3 •---·....1 · • hom e environment. Mesa =REMARC o. • 3 -~ Smogless • 1'rd r-q./beaul. Honolulu, Hawaii, 00 prop n1anha, IO, .. ~v"~ 613-2964 1 .xrv1ces. rooms per hr. Bring han&'f!tt. 673-0289. LARGE · Clean. Priv. Ba, Close to bch. Respectable mature gent. S70 mo. 962-4033 aft 5. ..... Oceanfront 4 Br, 4 ba, 2 sty tax. 61' • 48 ton cargo boat individual lots in H.8, All in Verde. 546--0469 $21.50. F\111 guaran. Credit 64f>-0345 hm, Oceanside for vac land, converted t() 8paclous Jiv. well developed areaa. $8350 BLK. s!)ort hair dQg, lge. Atlanta. Fenced yd, equip, cards OK. 847·6688, 646-1234 -=<='-======= income or smlr hni, Orange Ing. $23,500 valu. want per lot • terms By OWner ma.le, y.1ung. nr La Paz Rd. AREA or Brookhurst & Janitorial '"° Cnty. 531-0651, 5404428. property o_r '! 642-9988, Ca 11 Mr. ~ 714:. Well behaved. Eve, 495-0062 Allanla. Fenced yd, tqUip, Car.,.t Layln9 &. $15 PER wk up 'w/kitchen $30 ·wk up apts. $6 per nlaht le up. ritotel. S48-9'755 PRIVATE room & batb,en. tr, patio, $65 mo. 962-135.1 GREEN Parakeet. vi c playniates. Hot Juncbes, R ep•c.;_ir ____ .;_662=6 CLEAR. View Maintenant9 HAVE: IBM. Exec. elt'C. WILL TRAOE 10 irri&:ated . Marinet''S Sehl N B. t-efs. 968-6819. We do r-verythln1 II type~:riter, xlnt. cond. \\'ant acl'f': in Hemet w/3 ,.ntals • · · 64'"""'° OTHER * EXPERT CARPET Spes:i.u.ing in apt cleanup. IB!tl Standard type,vriter, foc Orange ~--·-~ •---e Aero" •-6200 1\1 of l w ll n ts I F 24 •-.......,,.., u.......,u •'"' b lnsta latlon & Repair ree est. '"' aerv. or submit. Nancy J. Moore prope~y-_ --· HIMALAYAN Siamese male ba ysllllng. my hom e, "A"2'9S 0 l lj bo Sho NCI job too small, 646-5971 --======== Realty. 673.3101 Call <n4.) ~ WNER Forced to •ell cal, approx. yr. old. Vic. ar r p'g Center area. _ * M>24.86 C.M. * \Vant free/clr waterl'.ronl lnduslrial bldg + adjacent bca~t. ?fl Ac. at Rancho GranvWe Dr .. N.8 . ~ll7 =-=-'838..c.-~~~--CARPET LAYING Landscaplnt '8lO home w/slip & boal lo ::or. lot. L.A. $63.000·$38,500 Calil.orn.la, Only_ $2100 per MALE SIA.i.'d.ESE CAT, vie. WIU. do babya:ltting niy C.A. PAGE 642-311Q, -~~------ LARGE rm in l\.1esa Verde borne, priv bath. patio. Prefer lady. $80. 545-0138 $300,000. Xchg free/clear eq1y 1''0R !·tt f Ac.: .w/~ down take Del Mar, HB. 847-2367 home. :Fenced yard. Ages NEW La.WM, re-flffditt(. tots-acreage lmanagement Myers owr fUVUlCmg from 1 yr up. 2:'.117 Santa Floors 6665. Comph~te lawn care. Clean free) 0,vncr n 414ag.3103. 673-6756 Fa.rel Walker Realtor 646.7414 Lost 6401 Ana AVf'. C.M. 642-9008 up by job or month. Free ~~~:;:;,.C:O~G:;.;;C.-H~ . 2\-i Acres by Owner, Utilities-SPANISH Speaking lady will CARl-'ET VINYL TILE estimates. 1'~or info call Motels, Troiltr BEAUTIFUL EN LIS 6 3 Bedroom !'°me m Redon-near running water .._ Goll LOST: Department of I.be 897-2417 or 84&-0932 RM H ne.' P"""d"""' do Beo•h ""th l•w of LA « A....... .., Id-care for infants k children. Free estimate Lie. Contr. Courts 5997 ome ...,.. .... .u. ". ... v . . Course. $950 dn. $14,900. ,,...,...., s ... c type badge in ---------tor N.B .. CdM. C.!l.f. Duplex area, will. TRADE for rea1 <IDl 782:-2727 brown leather case, in vie Fenced yd. S48-3887 54().'7262 546-4478 Moving & Sforage 6140 5 LARGE I ft ' $!"' or units. Home vah $29,500 property ln Orange Counly. ol Westminster Blvd btwn LICENSED CHILD CARE spaces e · ti I Call uo o<•i F'·ll Re I 0 '" -14 N H · h mo. No hidden cost. Yr cear. .........,.,., . "u er aly'"°""° . R.E. Exch•nga 6230 Rancho St & Golden \Vest. ewport e1g l5 Gardening 6680 round fishing, country Jiv. $1,000. Fibregla.s Dune Bug. 2 Newer duplexes, side by Please call $-~ S48-604G LAWN Afaintenance. Once a ing. High &: dry on gy, stret't ){'gal, big rin•s, slde: 3 Br. 2 Ba: ea., fplcs; WANT free/clear waterfro 1 • REWARD! BABYSITTING my hOme. week' general up-keep Sacramento River. SUr4 u1anycxtras. Trade for late nr. beach. Equity approx. home w/sllp I: tdi.t ~Lost small reddish-bnl\vn Lindberg Sehl area. Exprr lawns. flo\\.~r beds, shrubs. rounded by orchards, quiet, model VW 01· ?? Capo Bch $27,000. Trade for land or $300 000 Exchange free/ cocker mix puppy. 6 mo:; mother. r cnced. yd. 64~9 Call anytime before 9 pm, clean air. Rec. hll.ll , laun-496-557'1. indust. Realtor 673-4350. de~ ~ts • acreqe (man-old, "Brand~"· Lldo Isle-BABYSITI'ING My home, 546-6678 ask for Tim dry. marina. Nr. shopping. ~~ Acre Country &late, 3 Have commercial site wa. agement free) Owner. (n4) ~783 23. Plea!lr' f'eturn. t.1esa de.I Mar. Afiy age GARDENING -exp & Write for further details. Br. 2 ba, l.Bx36' pool. hors-ter softener, used 1 year, 459-3103. . . . welcome. Call 546-3003. English speaking. Minor Pollard's M.H, Park. PriY. es OK or units in l"('ar. Gc n1 top. .transportation BUSINESS nd REW! Doberman pup, ears BABYSITTING • good rates landscpg & yard care. owner. Rt 1, Box TI4E, Red $20,000 equity, \Vant income car. \Vant used camper or FINANCIA•L unc~. 19th & Npt; CM . • l'efi>. $12.50 per child by 541-4292 aft 5 Bluff, Ca 96l:l80 property or ? Call 531-7636. VW. 642-4424 Cham. collar. Ans "Pete". wk. Fenced yd. 548-2437 I AL~'~S-',Garo~-,-'-nln-g~&~Lo-wu HOLIDAY BEACH MOTEL Newport Beach Full Family '56 Dodge 6 cyl, Honlcy.tonk Business • , ' 54S-&1?3. 21.54 Nwpt Blvd, WILL BABYSIT v.•eekdays Maintenance. Commerclal, Rooma ·kitchenettes. 100' to Tennis ctub ~1embcrnhip. piaoo 1'-'/fiuor. keys, Cam~ Opportunities 6300 CM. aft 6 PM & all day wkends. industrial &: ft's1dential. Beach. Free Continental Will trade· for motorcycle or . ~r ~eePs 4, 'fai>C recorders • . • SIAMESE female, red collar Call 64~18. * 646-3629 * breakf.ast. 1832 N. El land, $700 value. &: walkie-talkies, tta:dc for* CAN:ERA'''SHdP Pri Vic. Seaview & PolnaetUa, -~-----AL'S Landscaping. Tree Camino Rea.I SC. 492-3582 Call 546-03.17 \\'hat have you ?? 64f>.0077 Newport Beach 'shopp~: CdM. 4 Unhappy children. Brick, Masonr y, RenwvaJ. Yard Remodeling. I \VEEKLY rates. SE A Waflt ~mall ren1ote control 1st REAL ESTATE con· center. Est. 5 yrs • xlnt No quetlions aaked. Reward. etc 6.560 Haul triu;:h. Clean-ups. LARK M 0 TEL· 2301 TV. \Viii exchange SJOO tracts 12) $1750 prln ~ance income. $6000 + inventory. Call 673-3-452. Repair sprnklrs. 673-1166 NewportBlvd,CostaMesa. equity in 114 acres near PClY.l)lents $300 quarterly• AUTOMATIC LAUNDRo.SILVER bracelel resembles BUl.LD, Reinodel. rep11.lr i ROTOTILLING I R 5999 Palm Springs. Bal. payable final Apr '71 Trade late mo. MAT, Fully equip • min buckled strap, vie. Bayside ~:;.:·n~~c~ j~; ~~ r;_,~1: New 1 a\\/ n s , landscaping. ~·-'c":.;'•::I:.• __ .;.;_:.; $15 mo, 536-ll3l de\ car/truck ?t 675-1047, tinie investment. HI i h Dr., CdM. reward. Call col· Lie. Contr !162-6S45 Shrubs & trees removed. NE\V Ga1'agt, 16x20 for .& * traffir-loc. Sll.500 lect Corona. 73'-0326 11•ree est. 548-1742 storage only. ~ide, $25 w * * * * *OPERATING LAUNDRY. COVINA H.S. class ring lost Carpentering 6590 LANDSCAPING a mo . Husband/wife business • betw. -Tower 1 & 4 Hun-1 -~~--=---- REAL ESTATE high income. Health fore-tington City Bch. R~ward. CARPENTRY N;i::u~~w~, ~~sot~~~~e~: REAL fSTATE Generat · * Sl2-26.i7 * GARAGE $20 mo. Nr. O.C. Airport. Palisade& Rd. 548-5044 Storage only. General es sale. $10,900 l2l3l 337-4002 MINOR RBPAmS. No Job 1''rtt est. 548-1742 • TACO, .sr. Hig.h volume. G~o-LD--r~ .. -.... --11.-1-;_g_h_t_e r Too Sm.au. Cabinet in gar-CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST 0 __ 11_1c_1_R_•_•_l•_l ___ 60_70 Office Rental 6070 Ian~.tic loc. llt1n. down to 4/23-Reuben'i; Al r po r 1 ages &: other cablneta. ---------qualified buyt>r. Sl6,000 Restaurant . Reward! 568175, Uno answer leave Mowing, edging, odd jobs. DELUXE 1·2 or 3 rm. suite Best Location in CdM * LlJ?o'.CH STAND. ~Y op. fJ48-g!)66, Tn!g at 646-2372. H. o. Reasonable. ~s.6955 Income Prope'-rty_,__6000_ nr. Orange County Airport 800 to 1400 Sq. ft. Deluxe Off. eralion • waterfront loc. -~--------Anderson Z & 111 Lawn l\Ialnt. Prep. OCEAN VIEW 1& Irvine· lnduli t rial ice Spaces. Avail lmmed. Owner will train Good SMALL white beagle, brown ---~~-----Renovation, cleaning, haul· Complex. Carpet, drape21, Phone Owne•. 642-9950 terms. • $49SO tips on face & ears, 3 mos. QUALITY \Voodcraft . lml Ing. Reasonable. 54~98:Z Du•LEX • $41,950 music, air-conditioning & Call 545.8424. old .Newpt area Rt!ward · gen'! conslr. & carpentry. .-. A il bl NEWPORT Beach Deluxe 6"" ""°" · · Free consuUotlo" & quot•. Exp. Japanese landscape, janitorial service. va a e ·~ cl 'Qualify, CUS'J()M BUILT for Office!!. Air cond .. heated, Cal Ken 645-0044, 548-4235 · eanup. maintenance. f ., I .. , May ht. w/pr!v. ba. 2400 W .. Coast BI.ACK LABR pup 6 mos Mack 84z..84.42 years O pr .... c 0 owners.up. BOB PETTIT.-Realtor Hwy. old while mkg on chest. CARPENTRY.Cabine!s-Rocun Unusually spacious 3 bed· • 833-0101 • Vic Gothard/Slater, HB. Add., PaUos. ,,ny size job. JIM'S Gardening & lawn room owner's unit with..de •. _,..,......;...::::::.:.:~"=--EXEC olc suite •• 1100 sq. IL Rewd. :;f8-6Z49 . Mike ·G-il-1166 & G46-l5?G. maintenance. Rell. & com· lwct kitchen and LARGE Modern Offices crpts/drps. 44.4 Npt Blvd. I--;--------n1ercial * 5404837 dining room. Equally spac-17:; single. $l75 2 rm suite. Call art 7 pm wk d y s MANAGER· DISTRESSED Over while GEN. repair. add.. cab. I ..::.:::0::.::=50,cc=G~c.._--•-" G straw -· to t Font);.,, •0 -1,·og. ma•l>'lo. J HN N'S ARDENlNG ious 2 ll'l:Uroom unit reat Air cond. Sect"y service. 675-4644 Pll•"" s near " ,,_..... y -• Cl OWNER !Wph' in H.B R ard Anything! Dick, 6734459 a ... care, ean-ups, Pl,'Un-OCEAN VIEW .from each parking, centraJly located. FOR rent ollices or stores 11 • ew · Ing. planting. 962-3135 living room, Minimum main. So. Calif 1$t Nat. Bk. Bldg. 130 E. 17th St., CM. ·$85 National corporation. now ln.l;;;-="",-..,9=,_~,-~~ REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS JAPANESE Gardening tenance yard, PLASTER in. 230 E. 17th Street & up. 646-8lB1 tervfewing, for owner man. GOLD eanin&s Vic. Harbor * CABINETS. Any size job Service. Neat work. Cleanup terlor and YOU OWN the Costa :!1.fesa 642-1485 DELUXE LOCATION d~sk ager of complcle famlly rec-&: Adams. C.M. Reward. =-'25:;·"Y"'=-o':;';pe"r:;. 5-l""S-<="71=3= yd . malnt. ~2303 1 land! S500J down will han. Fret Conle•enct Rm. ,~,.,., phone answeri~g. reational sport center, 'Ex. Sentimental valu. ~9677 die! ,~ tremel high turn t aft 6 Cement, Concrete 6600 LAWN MOWING SERVICE WE SELL A HOME ~todernized oUlces. turn or secy st"rvicc. 644-4981 Y re on °' .,=·=-,_---.,-~~~ --Neat, rlepend .• ble, reason. uni. from $4:'.i. Air-cond, daily NO. c .r.t. oUice, nice. Prof. vestment of $12,500. Secured . ./'LOST: Large turUe Vic CONCRETE, all types. Free able. Free est. 846-0055 EVERY ll MINUTES janitor, ulil pd, 7 min S.A: Air-cond, (!pla, dpt, $79 ca. Rigid investigation invited. Htg. Beach. Rewani fo; cslin1ate. Sawing, breaking. JAPANESE Gardener serv· Wa Iker & Lee F~--~ IV. 4th St., S.A. "·"' AO""", ·•1' 541 '757 Must have management. &: return. 842-5643. h 1· k . I d . 2043 We1tcliff Dr. 64S-77ll Open 'ti! 9:00 Pl\I · .. , ~ !"~=~=-==~::="::==~===-/PR ability. Reply to Box 5801,,,-,--=~c--~---au 1ng & s 1 P o a 1 n g · Ing f". Valley, 1-I. Bch , Costa 541-Slll the Dally Pilot ot· call Mr SM. Female Burmese cat, Service & <1uali1y. 5'18-8668 Mesa, Npt Bch. 64:;.{1345 *OFFICE SUITE Industrial Mark Rice (714) 774-7050 ' w/tlea collar. vie: Tustin Bob for lease 2600 sq. ft. Ideal Property 6080 COIN LAUNDRIES . le Bay. C.M. Rwd! 642-5107 EXPERT cemenr \11 0 r k . location, downtown Laguna F 1 .d . WS'r Male Buset. 9 mo's Patios, walks, brick & block General Services ------ LOCAL & long dist. .,moving. Reas. stOrage. Free Eat~ 831-0IOJ, O.K. Van 4 Storage!. Painting, Paperh1n1lnt 6l50 CUSTOl\1 Painl:irw ''The Exterior-Interior Speclall1t•• Residential ~ Commerclal~ 'No job too lar&c. or too sn1all Lie, Bond. Ins. Won't be underbid! 646-3679 * PAINTING INT & EXT. Ave1y. 1 sty $260. 2 1ly $350. Incl all material k preparation. $18. per rm +· pa int. Local refs. Call Jack 894-3895 or 837~925 No Wasting * WALLPAPER * When YoU call "Mac" 548-1444 SG-Of49 INT & EXT. Painting. Free ests. Loe refs. Neat I! Honest. Call Chuck 66-0809 or Jim 548-MOS METICULOUS PAINT EXP. DocKs.bouses, int.ext. INS. col. students. 675-5&1% EX'I'ER. Avg 1 Stmj $250. l Story $350. Compl w/good paint. Inter. Rm'a: $25 paint incl. Roy -847-1358 INTER or Ext. PAINTING, IMMED. sf:RVIcE. IACal rel. FREE est. 548-lUl Pi\ I NT ING-Int, & fit. llighest Quality. Lowest Prices. Fully exp. Ins. John 673-1166 PAINTING -Ext-Int. 18 yn. exper. lnR. Llc. Free est, Accoust. Q.ilings. S48-5325. NEED a Painter'! Interior .'!.. \.exterior. Experienced. 5.17~638 RftIRED Painter: 26 yrs ex per, Neat & honest. Non drinker. Call 536-6801 * PA'rcH PLASTERING All types. Ffte estimates Call 54().<825 Beach. Crptd, air • cond. NE\!/ Bldg., ll.000 sq fl tor From ~.!!, ~r~ ..... ~ blk. brown, white. Reward! walls. ~ yrs. exp. Yancey. PROFESSIONAL Janitor, Ulil. Priv dual rest. sale or lease. For details ~ <v ~· J111J Call 536-6803 642·1403 •Buena Park• Fullerton• -co===·==== r~~""'~~~~~-APT. CLEANING Plumbln"' · 6890 nn lac. 494-9481 iJ:attia £ta(fy: Cypress • \Vet1tmin1ter e -I • -CEMENT Work : Wa1ks & Special Unit Rate 646-26!$ ----'"'------ Business Rental HILLGREN SQUARE 2. stores avail. l~: immed. lease in one ot city's busiest shopping centers. App. 850 sq, tt. ea. ~ E. 17th St., Costa Mesa Call Mr. Bram (213) OL 1·27QJ 3,000 SQ. FT. Corner sto~ downtown Santa Ana. Xlnt bugy loc. From 15c sq ft. 206 \V. olth St. S.A. 541-5Ul STORE OR OFFICE lSlO or--ul) sq. ft. Parking. Reasonable. 646-2414 2630 Avon St., Ntwport 1620 Sq. Ft. Retail or office. 30' tront.a,ge on Newport Blvd. Across from C i t y Hall. Ervin, 6T;J-1601 . Tiil': QUICKER YOU CALL. n1E QUICKER YOU SELL CORONA DEL MAR , Hunli"..+'"" Beoch e G-~,. Persona s 6405 patios. wh1ttevPr you need PLUMBING REP'~ Deluxl' office space. % funs. 642-6560 Grove·~.-.. ~··ti"o • ~': •• 1-T ___ G______ in concrttc the price is BUILDING Maint. & Repair. ~ •~ ~·~ Om GWft J Plumblng. Carpentry & No job too small Ground fir. Priv ba1h. N!'w . Ana e Cotta Mesa e Ana. e, r. right! Call Bob 642·9187 aft 5. Painting. Floors. &1&-l286 • • 642-3U8 • crpt. Park'g. UW pd. $135 Commercial 60l5 heim e La !l.1irada. Sells CONCRETE \\.'Ork all type$. \ mo. O\vnl'I'. &73-6757 ' IBUi~·ER OFFERS NE\!/ CALL CHARLIE . 525-783.1 New &: u!ledl cars & trucks Sawing, breaking, hauling, v~:~~.:C~'t!nd Surveyor . Remodeling '& OFFICE SPACE 21,500 sq. ft. deluxe bldg. FRANCHISE. sun Reslator at Conne I Chevrolet Sldploading; J..ic. Service & Evenings call 54Q..8977 Repair 6t40 ~sq fl & 720 SQ ft. ·can be Leased, choice orange coating for windows, all in-~ H=i C.M. 546-~d Quality. 842-1010 ---------- con1bincd. 2588 Ne\\'J)Ort County area. Property ventory, equip, mailers&: e ptt n~ ~as a pa *CONCRETE Work . llANDYMAN ROOM ADDITIONS. L. T. Blvd .. C.M. near City }lall. clear. Owner w/carry lsl literature. Enough Inventory saleaman survival advertise-Licensed. Patios I 1hv\vys.1 General Home Repair c 0 n st ru ct ion. ,FJUnlly Bkr. 642--0599 vrkdays. TD 81.~%. Prepcl int. ok. kl do $2000 worth of work; _m~e-"L~=--~--etc. Phillips Ce 111 r n t . I '°=~·~•-75-~l_l<_I_•~-rooni s. single or 2 story. OF'FICE Oil !'.!'TORE 530-3645 am, szs.5430 pm. comp!. for ST:il c ash , Sinzle-Wldowfld,Divorcetl 5-18-6380 DON'T Dellpair •• ncpalr! 'Estimates. plans, layout &: lj x 35' or .30 x 3.J' MARINA tn Newport Beach. ~g..2425 * WOMEN * DECORATIVE CONCRETE Chet Wine's Rrpair Service financing. Call 847-lfill. oU st pking & util· lum Prime Joe. F'ee $315,lXXl GREA1: food I:. ma.It snap Everyone's looking for lhe DRIVES-\VALKS-PATIO S46-9S4t weekdays * IF you need remodeling. Newport&. Bay Center, CM Exel. King a 3. rd, R.E. ope.ration for' sale to right right OM, We have a way-so 612·8514 painting, or repairs. Call 2{)52 NeW?>Ort Blvd &*1252 MI 2-2222. par~y. UCI Campus. Good call ua It begin to live! ~10RE Concretfl pa tio for Hauling 67lO Dick 642-1797 1200 sq. ft. OfCice FOR Sale, store building. bustne1s now • lanta.tic 541-6661 less money. Artistic setting in Civic Cen1er. Santa Ana. 686-698 w. 19lh St. Bethel growth. $5000 dn. Contact 24 hr. recordinc & finishing. 644.0087 P> k-t > • I T •••1168 A Dan. 833:-~70 11.r 1ng. crp s, "'a er inc . owers area . ......-gt. MEN! Why spend money on CEl\1ENT WORK, no job too From 29c 511 ff. r~n-a111 , FANT~IC ~us. ()ppor. 6 expensive can and clothell, Small, reasonable. Free NEAR C.M. City Hall ... Rm. IT~ WOND~L the rt-mechum sized restaurant whln all you need is one E.stim .. H. Stunlck 54S.861!S OU!ces. Paneled, carpets, many . buys in applla.noell in N.B. that must bt sold of Sir Walter'• famous drapes. $150. Call 642-0560 you find in the ClaSlitied .. due to lo" of mgr. 10M do"'n European razor culs to oor-Child Cere, Ads. Check them now! Call Gale Pike · 49U373 for n1 a fair l.Lqie! 2052 Licenled appt to s~. Newport, C.M. 6610 ' Whlti Elephant.I! J\.10VING. garage ci(!an-up & lite hauling. Rl!asonable. Free estimates, 645-1602. YAF:.D/ Gar. Cleanup. Remove lret'!s, ivy, tra&h. Grade, backhoe, 962-8745 Roofing 6'50 GUTTERS & Downspouls Installed Rcuonable San Clemente 714: 492-3708 HAULING $10 A LOAD SeWint • 6MI Clean up. Tree Serv. Gen. I -'-"---'-"'-----.;.;..- Pruning 646-2528, 543-8043 "ln::com::::::•:..P:..r:.:•;i:P"::"=y-6000=;;.;.;l•:.:<::om"'-'•:..P:.;.:, ro_perty · 60001nconit Property 6000 1500 -11000 INVESTMENT. SONG WRITERS Local perllOflnel placement WANTED Pre SchooJ .serving So. Or· ange Co. 6:30 am to 9:30 llAULING & Clean-up , pm 7 dty~ wk. Full-P/tlme-. Trees removed. Reasonable. Aft. IChl. Rat!?ll for 2 & up. Free estimate. 548-1742 SEWING & Alteratlont. Ex· pert Service, Re8.5. prices. Call 546-8441 S©"R~lA-LGt-!fs• Tlte Pun/• with th• Built-In Chuckle O Rwronv-Setttri of fhe lour ¥rambled wilfds bt- low to form four tlmple word1 VOORi:O I ., DORSO [• I -~ lllt.t l'-c .. r_~ ... r.-11_L....JI t w~~.~~~ :1;::J~i. ~;;:~~ l•-sE_E_1_W_~---,lO years shot o man --. •1-'"1 ~,..;..~,--,--, _J 0 C0111pl111 tltt chuck!~~ . by f1Ulnj fn 1n. mis&inq wotds . you de~elo¢1 rom i11p No. 3 below.- • Pl~~1~¥30~~~sunERS,IN I' 11 ,, I' J' r ) • t!FJ~1E• l!Tl!IS TO I I I • I I ' I service estab. 24. yrt. in· I G p 1. I terested ln active or Mn-ac· Cal ery o 111 tive participants. 642--7141 A A M RECORDS . (213) 464-75111 5 VENDING machlnn -· cookies and/or candy. Good ALCOHOLICS Anonymoua additional il'ICOme. l·l hrs Phone 542-7717 or wrtte to \\'Ork per wk. Good location P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. N.B. /C.l\f. 675--.5MI. VP TIGHT? Ntied someone -.. to talk to! Dial·A·Ftlend, ,. Money to Lotn 6320 847-1293, no recording tJ46.3706 or SU.129'J. CARL'S Moving, Hauling & Cleanup. ~ Ton P.tJ. Reas. Contractors 6620 Free Ell. 5'8-8918 --------' A.dditionS '*' Rt-mod e!l.ing Housecleaning l'red ff, Gerwick, Lie. 6735 673-604-1 ., 549-ZJ70 BAY & Beach JGitorial Carpets. wlh(Jow1, noon:, Cerptt Cle1ning 6625 elc. Res & Commc'I. Upholstery Sewine My place, 545-7012 eves. ---Tile, ·ceramic "74 * Vern~. Tbe Tile Man * Cust. work. Install &:: Ttpaint. No job too 1mall. Plaster patio, Leakll:lC shower Npair, 847-1957 /M(t.02(l6 1 TD L 6490 &16-1401 st, oan T_ut_•_r_in_g-,-;---~. 'Y" ' WINDOW WASHING -• ~ COMMERCIAL HOME •977 Lowct~Jnlertt1i .Av&ilt.ble TEACHER '\Vill Tuttil' ' "' ·· Cal!Pete-49i.U07 ---~----- TOPSOIL- 2nd TD L'oan ~~booedChl SUdb':'.'.:Alo>c.•:11 CARPET MeoaO•arungS.rvlec -~~-.~~:."'~~ .. • ..,.niK; u ,,.,,.11. a STEAM CLEANED Carpets, "-'indowt1, tlt)Ors. etc. 49$4632 Eves. 536-<?fl lOc SQ FT · 64~""'211'1 bNed on =II OW'S 1' ' • . "''-~ Co!l!_m<'i. 548-<Ul g N HE AJao ...,,., lnstalraikm 10E'S CLEAN.' SIRV. Troe s.r.1 .. Sttvlng Harbor ~ 21, yn. 646o5t7t Wo do ~"vcr;vthin,r • ~. &: Sattler Mortga9e Co. DISCOUNT Carpet Oeaners. ~in. Fl"er' E&t, 549-3126 ~EE SERVICE Alt types 6 .. 336 E !711> _, TIME FOR =~:·~-~·~'f'zi< HOUSECLEANING ~Ins. Frte Eltlmalu ANNOUNCIMINTS ' I""•· ""'" Roi. 633-2354 end N~TICIS ' QUICK CASH 1;e~t~l~v:im;c~~~ ~~~!~~:!.N.::~ · TREES, HtdJes. trim, cwt. atump1, removed. hauled. 31 )'l'S exp. )"ully tns. 64i..tDll ~ouhd IFroo Md '4Gt THROUGH A DAILY PILOT a...iued 5-18-5!8' "846-J875 0:'1.li.E °'""" Sherm-rd. 1 ____ No-'-w_1 ____ I·=======;=· Ufthalit; "" Owner m&y cJa.lm b)' kt•~ • fronint •1!5 C:: 'Y. ~.'r:'tt a-ntr~'3ins papers. DAILY 'PILOT DAit.Y PILOT Dlt.fE·A·l"-'.!'-'::!l!----..:.-= CZVl(().gQ:iCU.tom, Uphol. .,..,,..,'r'W LINU. "'rbU WI ~ them 1,RONlNG Jn my. home, $1 Europeanj Ctatwnanablp I -~~ -------WAN for Just pc1nnitJ ad.-,. Dial ltr. Dressmaking I. alte.ra,. 10090 fin! 60-J.Ot FOUND 'l.&rie R&.bblt. J AD 642-5618 lions. 54!i-7&1t 1$11 N9WP(ltt Blvd. C.M 1 _...cS_CRA.:;___M-'--UTS __ A_N_S_W_E_R_IN_C_LA_SSl..:....;.F_IC_A_TI:___O_N__:.7.::.60:...·o:._:~ IT1;~~\lhb "" .. 1 ''"· . --------,,,. --~-----~ --~-------------~--~------------- - --~-~~--·-·~ . -·-. .. ...---. ---··,,.--- ' "'""'" .,., lO. 1970 It IMPLOYMIHT C 0-0-K s. 1,.,11., ·Grill 7020 to epe11 NEW ' JOIS a IMPµ)YMINT ~IS a IMP'~OYMllf1'. :!!!!.~ IMl'LOYMINT JOU a IMP'l.OYMINT J•~• MM;. W... 7100 ..l1la1 MM .. W-. 7100 lelaa .,._ w .... 7100 JoM Mer-. Wem. 7100 DAILY PllPT . CLAllllllD INDEX DRAFTSMAN I NVOICE Clerk 6 ~ Secmary-Glrl Frklly EotJmoW>tr Tniw tor,... RIOllnRID NURSE -• -Adwr1lo- tnetor. L I t e .ecnwtal J.C...C.CU. inc A&tncy Meed8 .Extraor. ••iocr ..... .SC. •'Orlc. mu•t "be jiiod With Eijiindlor --~ ®>ary &Jrl """"1. RlaJd •IA£ D...., ...,. Dl•lt• •"" layout ••· firutt•. m-nu OJ>IN'l'llllllU... ... .....,, .._ --incl • .....,.. ,., ,.,, -..,. •• ,.,. ......._. perlence r-rulrM In LARGE L&bd DeYeloslment 11catloft ~. CoDt&ct .nee. It a .-.. ot i.umrr. ' r • t •tint rnMhlnery c:o in S'n. erup Co .,...., tenaDDil 'So. c.tt Cam-Pnfer 21.30. $500 mo •tart. HOUSIS FOR SAL& MOTILL TllAILlil couan· = w'lth ..,...ah • un.. bu u tmmed openin, for ~ ti.. m Reply~ In confidence, ::,\~··:·::::::::::::::::=: 't,,~lc~.=:f. .,, '-• -,.....,. , .. ..;...-.... : eontftct ad-Hwy. So l..aatilM me> -P.O Box l)tt N.B 931153 .... IN:\. ..................... INCOMll PltOPlln'rl""-···= "'" 1fu.. &II , .. ~.... ,. .. , ..._.• -.. ' ' ' ' MSIA V'llM J ''-'''''"' .,,Ut IUllN£11 PltQPl!!a MATUllE-emp~ COLONY KITCHIN ex-'-nceiflcMttr mlni9tn.tor. Applicant ~-.-~/L .. elTrne.$450 COLUllPMh~ ......... -••. nu T•••LEJl'A"ie.' •-·• ~· --'-• s ID ~1 NIWPO•T llACM .......... , .. &UIUflSI •IMTAL ·······•··· nbel S:»ll will (Ive ~oder Ill IS TA u Ill ANT ••' pum,.. 1hould hive an e • ...,-·-·rc txclUna opty io 11.art in )egal .,..,.T .... m· .......... tl't 011•tc• ... •TAL ........••. H1t loWla' daytime care to your ING Ir elllinttrtni PW'Ch11uln&' 12 to I AM Shift Ueki. Very pteuant law :i~r.,:.111·:::::::::::lrJ =::t.~L'""•.~.:::::w ~ er chlld, 10I' room J211 Hllrber Blv4., CMtl Meu ,lllOl'IT SHAit bklmd. P0&IUocl. o •r 1 ofcl., rood benfl, CaD"Ml.u MYCIUT .................... liD 1111DU•T•W.. •IMTAL ........ , Ir board I: am.all wqe. Ill •-na..... f-eyl chlllenae and future tor tht ~ ln ptnon Elizabeth S-1122 Ah:-11 ...,.,....., .......•..••.•••••. tm I.On ......................... 1• -" --.-·--.... • ,... ..... DO'WI• tMDl:a ............... 1111 1LM11C1t11 .. ·····-···-··-.. •1• , ~ No weelrendl. J C CARTER CO. ri&ht penon. Stnd n:su.me Htmtlnpa Beach Abbot Per.:innel Agency. D'J •UTWP' ............ -•• -emus aaovu ............. 11r.1 &6:H86 ' · ' to Box M-767 Dally Pilot ConvaJnoent Holpitd w Wamu SUite 211.. Santa ...,, .... • .. ""-' ........... ""' u•SM• .................. . 19 .... old 1tudent at 671 W. 17th StrMt * LADIES* lMO lhow um Delaware, H.B. A~. ' ~:J-::1~.~~.:.::::::::··~: ~·LJ~~.'.n ·:::::::·:::: ,. Jobe MM,. Went. 7100 Joltrl Mtn, Wem. 7100 c .. ta Me11 """.--y' ~-I Xiii uu IAClt IAY ........ _ .......... :aw 011.111e1 co. ••o•••TY ..... atJ Cut:IDtjo Giria Sch Palo (7141 1414421 SARAH ... v·~~•n. ........ Genera vrrtU to ....-. SECURITY Guards. Newpt. LUTSLU•JI .................. ,,. OUT 011 lT.t.T• 'r.cw ........ :a,. Alto wants awnmer pmlUon --·-----"'.'.".:-1----------I: all •boa j •we Jr Y. Acent8 pq-rec. bPlnc so area. Call Q3...3520 or i'lvT:: nitu.ce ........ : ... ;: :,0,":~tsTo: ~-=~~. ::::: ... ,.,., ·Wd.l:lc catt of children. BABYSl'JTER, reaponsible, OULD CARE: Need lovUll'. Abaolutely no lnvflt'mt, We WPM. lowly olficu. call 631-3010 11).6 PM CCMlotLl DIL MAit ..... -.... t• •IAL •JTAT• UllVU ....... It 'Live • m. travel lll)'Where. lite boolekMpins. I AM· lady to care for ' mo old Equal opportunity employer tnin. 531..a&n or ~ Loraint, Wntcll.H Pereonnel * SERVICE srA~ ATl' ~= :::~~~.:::.::."'::;: ::S-1. ":L.~:8 .. ::::::::::::::: ~'78111 a:30 PM. 5 days, 2 boys, pt A .f yr old boy, 11.a:ht * DllYDS * L .. ol Socy/Trrtee $451 Aeency, 20U Weatclltt Dr., • Salts Full Ir: part tim; .,.., isu.Nm ................. 1• BUSINESS nd 2 in achoo!. $1.il mo. houeework: 9-7 Moo-Jo'rl, s..s NB i45-2110 • LIDO llLIE ' .................. 1•1 I LOVING car. for your 5G-3058 daya or 6'5-l45J N c-:.-t---e FEE NECO · • . position for tttpongible, •ALIOA 1su•• .............. tus FINANCIAL cbiJdren, my home. H.B., ~· :.· ~~ ~~~~ 0 ..--•._-1 Lite SH ok. Xlnt opt:Y, for POWER. M1chine operator, neat appwinc man. Top :~:~:::= M.ri:u•·:::::~: au11N•s1 o....O•Tl."4n11t .. 1M1 day l:/or night. by day aft 6 · pemwitnt. ~ NecesMrJ ~ht fitl. othtr tee &: free draptl (ltl)y. Exp. Colt w~, bonus plan i: pmtit ~~A~Au.aY .......... = ~.."J::~~~:fV,::, .. -... :::=: :or wk. 968--6746 BABYSI'M'ER. Qve-ln, need·,====,--=~,--. Yul ...,,. es.a c:::llilDrnll jobs, Drap@I')', lti.G2TQ Jiharing:. Under reconatntc· SU.L lllACM ................. MM UtvlJTNNT ...... , ........ ~J AIDES lDr va1ffCit.llCt ed i.mmed. 2 children. Call CLERICAL • wanted, put -JASON IEST * R ...._1d * tion. ww r&-open May Ith. lUMlCT ttAc• ............... MM MOttlY TO LOA• ........ -.. .mt • con . 646.o&52 c M dri"1nl s-c:ord. • "--ace,....... . _, ,,..,_ w.•D•M •• ..,.. .............. l P•llONSAL LDAIU ............ 6121 elderly care or famUy care. eves, · · time conaklemi. Ylll' itrt. YELL_,,. CAI CG. E mployment ,...~ney If ""'' can -60 wpm you Write or .. ...,1 Ray .....,,,y. U*o •uc;11 ........ -........ t• , .. WIL•Y LOI.Mt ,. ........... 6»1 54'1""81 Apt avail. 64z..&400 vn 2201 So. M1in, Santa Ana 3 --I :!I"11 job in' 49'-SB57, 604 s. Coa11 t Hwy ......... 000 ................... 1 ... COLU.Tl•AL "°"NI ......... mt ~Ho!1emakers. BABYSITTER fol' w. Yna: lJtl E. lath.. A helm have a e.--.--. c ne:w MANOI CCKINTY ............. u• lllAL ISTATI LOI.Ml ........ uw • ..... Girl Frid•• nlr:I ov 18. Reliable, Lte COMPANION I Houtekeeper, "---Mel& 92N W, Katen., "' field Pttlodical ra.bes $400 Laguna Beach, Calif. OUT o• CO\llft''f ............. ,.. MOllTOAGIS. .,,... ~ .. ,.QU -•. :=::""'.:::::~;::;~:;;;;;:;~=;;:;;' 5f6.5ClO or m..1220 • . .. _.,...;......, ' SE VICE s . .. _ __,__ OUT .. ITAT• ............ -.. 1'11 MOMIY WAMT•o ............ ... .-iatUre -steady hskP&, 5 da wk. m¥ tun matutt \vom&n, exper., 11~· ,... eo _.ure -.... Call Gloria Ka,y, ~ R tauon A • .., • .....,,t ''""'" .................. 1411 ANNOUNCEMENTS ftdl!l'tntes '46-7257 on bch N.B. 67>6261 in DRY ~,o:.n • ....,.K.O. • ......----______..,._ COASTAL AGENCY req'd for ciJ,Y 1; e~ shirt.. wa1TMl•1T111 ................ •11t O C t.:=========~ I BABYSl'IT!Jl. Eader Sehl. · Call Wr731& Exp. only. corr DRAPERY ----.---2190 Harbor Blvd., c .M. Abo nicht man, at Shell ::~fl.fl":. :::::::::::::::::ffi: ,0~~ ,:!_ !!., ~~ ....... ,... l~:Jl;•;b;•;;A~-~;;·;;·~w;;om.;;;;;1;100;;; I dist. 2 Cblldren 5 I. a. t'ONSC'IENTIOUS, capable 642-02'10. _. ....... .., .. " Lecaf Office ...... n.-...urant Station 2800 w. Coast Hwy. t:i~:~ .. ~.::::::;::·::= rn ................................ = "'PM EXPERlENCED W""'~ Ne Ch•-• llr/• mrrff ,...,.._ Newpt. Bch. ru1T11t ........................ 1... .. .................. . 962--3ll3 after... . \\-'Oma.n to take Charle of __ ..... _.. _.n ... _.....,,_ ........ •• BUSBOYS • COOKS NO•TM TUITIM ............... 1 ... AMNOUNCIMl•T• .............. It ~'-=.:::::':::::=.,;::;-_.,,-;;:;;-;:;;;;' records and e:nrollmerltl for .,.,.. ~ 1~· ..,.., DSHWHRS. W~ SERVICE Station Attendant, IUfANllM ................ wt ll•T"' ............... -........ n Babysitter wanu:u y:ic llOM, hildren'• sCbool:. -Some Mr. Andtrson s 4 I -I 414 Please: call !or appt, All Shilts. tnt"rvl.ewing \Ved., over 21. Perm. full time. s1LvauDO CAwvo• ............. ;~ro'':t.~uAllT'::::::::::::::::l: abilities an Li mite() ageoc;y TRISH HOPKINS (II E. 17th, SuJte 224 C.M. '42-1479 Mon-Fr1, call aft Ii pm . ~---in-work I: film ahow· SWedivh SrntJrpJbord, C.M. &lperior Aleney 642-nCl Exp'd. Days. ApPly in t:::~:: ~tt: . .-·:::::::::::::::= •UM•UL 0111aCT0•1 ......... u 675-5256 N.B. • ....... ,. 1 "'-~--~-1a ... F'rl., &: Sal No phone calls. l.AOUM.t ... ul!L 119 l'Lo111n ................... u ;_ -"-"" 2151 rn·y Cook -~ f1t trainee11 li3 n&rllll'K, ......., -esa JnlBO'S COFFEE SHOP ...,..,.n: Browns Shell Serv. N YOIJO ........ -.. ,,. CA•O 01' f'tlAWIU .............. 11 .. ~ EXP-·~CED M ..... ~ ""' • ._.,.... u• ...... ~ MllSIO ............ 11t MaM0•1•... ..u ~ -~nu;,,i, w/--ftltailrant exper. ,.. .... ,, 990 E. Coa.!it HW'\I,. N.B. U.M CLIMl!flllTI ...... 1n1 -.............. . .. _~ •hop. Call 492-5922 or OOUPLE, lltmi·rtt:ittd . or .......... I ..... ---~ z.oso E. Cout Hwy, .......... ..,, IAM JUAN CAl"llT•AMO 1'21 CIM•Tl!•Y LOT'S ............ .A411 ~~ Cal mired !or a1•l•l&nt Above av& pay. n a , --------------RN't-ICU. All -"~-avail. SERVICE Sta. Pump Isl. "''ISTl:AMO llAC" 17>1 CIMSTl•Y c•YPTS ........... ,, 492-76'6 San Clemente, · benofitl. Apply 0., My'a, "'LOOK'' ''SPECIAL'" ..-mll!I OAMA POINT 11• C:IM•T••Y CllYl'TI -.... ,. .... ,. manqen of new apartment Xlnt workinc cond'i. C.on-aaleaman. Exp'd prt!fd. 11,. C••MA.T011a1 .............. MH Bank com-•--. A-"-•• + 12924 Bnch Blvd, G. G. Mor Comfort bra. wip !or l)y ~ ~1 E "-• H OCl.Alt,IDll ................... l77J M•MO•IAL PAllCI ........... ICl1 EXPERIENCED ~ _. .. ,_ tact Dir. of Nuninr C.M. tt .w. __, • ......... wy SAM 01100 .... ................ 4UCTIONI ................... '411 ••NK STENO salary. No pe:b-or children. FRY Cook. exper. Rel~ fittinr Or",._$0.?; .. Call Mn. Memorial HOsp MZ-2734 at Goldenrod, Corot». del :,1~1~ ~·~.o·:::::::: ~=IAT~ 1ente11 .......... .w -Write n:ply to Boz M 43& _._, ... ....._ C.0 ..... Coffee Conway,~. . M 675-0533 CONDOMINIUM ......... ,, .. ttll AVI · .................... ws ~· "~ c M J Purch11lnt Admln ar, ou•Lo11 .011 llAL• ........ 1n1 A•• TllAMl,OITATION ....... ~ l;,,,!l!!""'"'•'"'""""""""'' I Daily Pilot Shop, 562 W. 19th, · • MACHINIST • Job 1hop e:1ti. r. •• 000 • _1 SERVICE Station At· "'"•TMEMTS 11011 SAL• .... 1tt1 AUTO TllAMSl"O•TATIOfl ..... ...u UNITED CALIFORNIA ===,--~=---:-:I-_:...,=-:-:-::-::=:= .. • T Liit LICIAL NOTICIS ........... ..... COUPLES. Mature, to matertomanap:small shop. ' • tendant apply Bill Rash REN A~ Ol•MAM a TUTolltN• ....... .... ACCOUNTANTS BOOKKEEPERS -llANK -manaae '1pt. units in Hun--GENERAL OFFICE Set up exp on lathe, mills, 2:.(=e1:· :;;,e ,:PA!:. Stand~ Station, ~l El Hou ... Furnished SERVICE DIRECTORY '4667 MacArthur Blvd. ti.nrton Beach 6l>-48Z1 f..5 l ""-'office insw'anee bqrd. drill pre1111e1, ect. Wonderful w--"-P•no---· •-ney, Toro Rd. Lqune. Hills. ••M•llAL .. .. ......... = AC:COUMTIMO .. .. ....... '911 Newport Beach. calif. ..... • ._,._.. --·nlty for .... _t man ~lg,,w ... ~ "6"' ••HTALS TO •KA•• ......... ANSWl•IMO SllVtc• ...... '5111 , GENERAL OFFICE MAINTENANCE (nt) 54GM24 COUPLE for janitor work, Call Loraine. Wetu;s.u• ~· opl""...... •16'• . 2M3 WestclUf Dr., N.B. SERVICE Station Att!.nd&.nt, C:OITA M•SA ................ .11• l"l"LtANCa: •lPAIAS. ll'ltb .. UU EqUll opportunity empklyer' exp'd only, Good ~ a: 110Me1 A&ellCY. 20"1 wmdiff Call eves tor appt, ~ Hi-2770. full &: pm lime. Apply in :~~ ~fio'r~.:::.::::::.:::·ri: :e;:"~~ .. :',~;·::··:··:::··:::=: workin& . conditiom. Call rr., N.8.' MS.mo. ?.IAOIINE Operator, ex· penion Airport Texaco, 4678 C:OLL••• .................... 1111 AUTO. 5"1 ...... T .... lk. ~ BAR MAID WANTED for ... __ ...,. A ..t.. 715 s ••WPO•T llACM ............ tttt aAIYSITTIMO ........... ,,. _,_ b••. can after 1 pm. ~9393 GI I , Way Te v .. pe: ....... ~-... Prv . See Bett;v ~ at Campu!I Dr., N.B. ltlwt'OllT N•TS ............... 1111 IOAT MAl~TIMAMCI ........ IW , .. ...,.. ., r r ' ' Coast Hwy 1Apna Beach, m 6 MSWPOIT SMO•IS .......... Ult 1•1c11:, MAtlON•'r. el~ ....... .... lC EYP'UNCHJOP'ER"S. ' MECHANICS MANAGERS SALES MEN & WOMEN call: • 642-4182 • * CUSI'ODJANs-.pum,, for v p Director ol Franchllirll . " SHAMPOO Glrl, li~hlie:d MYSH0111s ................ ms 1uso•1s1 1•11v1ca1 ........ w1 •ual i f l ed who . e'"'-y t' 'N t'I -"cem SJl. not Tues-Fri, l2-5. • xec Cootesaa H675"'85alrFu_ hions DOVI• l"OleS ............... ..,.m, IUILOl!•I ............... ,,.,..,.. BARMAID ttr bikini. top 'Y' or a ""'" · S •AA w11TCL1,, .............. CAT1•1No ... ,.,_ .......... '"' • a " , _..., cha.llenalnc .11o'Odt. Larp, req'd but"'m.Qtt be tekphone MALLIE' WJi.I u1111...-.•srTY llAJllC ........... = CA11N1TMA1u•e ............. ..... pay. Apply Sany ~· new ..... -nta complex, -·alll~ to .. --confl. \Vic I: Be:1uty Salon .. __ for Career G,irls .. .,... ........................ CA•l"•MTfl:INO ............... ,,. 290I Harbor CM -t95-4900 ~ -...... _.. ... ,.... ..~.. -·---n&•"""J SPOT WELDER . Mini.mum •ACK IA'f ................... IMll C:IMfNT, c~ .............. . • . • Newport Beach. Top wqn, dtntial appt'• w/perspective • hall openlnp tor: '10 w. Cbut Hwy., N.B. 2 )'TS exp; all phases, in-IAIT ILU•' .................. mt C"ILO CA••· UUMiMI .......... 11 545-0658 ·~Job Information ·Ancient Mariner -NEEDS - • DAY• DISHWASHER APPLY IN P~RSON 2601 W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH BABYSITTER For 3 boy1, 6. 9 A lD my home &t- te:rnoons. Mon.-Fri. C.M. attt. rut ttme durinC Sum- mer. Rder. Call 546-'Tl12 an 6. · Read The DAILY. PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace '" • BEAUTICIAN. fbr busy, popular priced C.M . Alon. Paid vac. No cl~tele req'd. New irrad ~. C-11 the Manqer. 5Q.9919 BEAUTY Operator, female, 30me foll de11d. Take nver clientele. 831)..1010 Bkkpr F /C to $650 Xlnt opty w/stable e1tbl'd arowlnc eo. Ideal worklnc condll. Top benl!. Call Min Elizabeth, 557-6122. .Abl1au Abbot Penonnel A,af:ncy, 230 \V. warner, suite 2ll. Santa Ana. **BROILER COOK EXPERIENCED. Penn. 5 or 6 day week • night •hifl Jn. quire biel ll AM.S PM. The Flv1 Crown1 R••taur•nt 3801 E. Pacific Cout Hwy. Ccrona del M.r No ph, calll BROWN i: Shup Ma.n, Set Up I: ()pft'ate. Exper re. quired. lOlS.H E. Chestnut, S.A. BOAT CARPENTER Exp'd. Larre CUAtom con- stnietion. Top w a I e 1 . \Vlll..ARD BOAT WORKS 1300 Lop.n Aw:., C.~f. BO'(S It. 14 c.rrtcRDu ... Opn ... Lagwto ... cb, So. l.aguno DAILY PILOr """" IUFFUM'S NEWl'ORT Maw lnt1rvlewin1 * COOK Excellent hours Excellent co. bene:ita * APPLY IN PERSON NO. 1 1''ASHtON TSLAND NEWPORT BEACH BUSBOYS I: OJSHWASHERS Over 18. Part time. Apply in ...-. COCO"S 78 P'uhlon taland Newport Beach, Calif Jobi Men. Wom. 7100.loM Min, Wom. 7100 AlMmbler1 Burroughs Corp. New Commarcl•I Computer Pl1nt MISSION VIEJO Hoo_., ... "" ASSEMBLERS at our new plant Jn Miuion Viejo, Calil. Some experien<e preferred. Apply I a .m. -4:30 p.m. Monday tllrouib Frid~ EMPLOYMENT OfflCE- W21 --Mhllon Vlttfo, CalH, ... a Eqa.i oppo1 lwlltf employer xlnl frinle bene:tits, ins., busineumeD for V.P. to I air Stylist, Manicurist or By &ppoL-:at. 646-3939 eluding set up. Day shift. Nv~TT1•1Ac• ........... m; ~~:::~c~t:11111N1 .. :· .. ::::::: .med, v1cal:ion. Write: Box terview. Wi&': Stylllt. Starti""' W"-denandent COllOMA O•L MAil ···········= CA•l"•T LAY••• & l:ll"AI• "'' M-641 ne Daily Pilot. S IE Call 541--3446 ""b -..-.-IALIOA ....................... o•A1"1•11s ................ ··"" MU T Sain upon exp. S pac e -T e:k LIDO •R• .................... m1 01MOL.1T101t .................. ...-DELIVER new1pape:r1. Truck req. Early momlnp, wtmd1 I: ar wkd&)-1, C&ll -DENTAL . Secretary. Rue~ tionitt-Bookkffper. Dental exper pn.f. U none, muat have exper ln timilar posi- tion. Muat be neat, well croomed Ir: able to meet public. No 1m1okinc dlll'in& oUice hn. Send complete typewritten l'ffi1mf! i'O Dally Pilot, N.B. Box M17 DENT AL ASS'T Ftont de1k only. Must have exper. u rttep!. in dental ot&e. Beach &rea. 846-3540 I azn. 9 pm, DENTAL A11 l1tant Orthodontic Dental office. Expe:r. req, Ortho. exptr pref. Ase 20-30. 642-2626 DENTAL ASSISTANT, O\<et Zi. Oral lllf'Jltl'Y office ex· per. f.fust tak" Ir: read X-Ra,ya. 543-m9 DESIGNER ProgreMive Oranre Coun- ty manufacturer haa an immediate opening for 1 designer. experienc:e:d In the de11lcn and bulldlnr of 1pttlal purpose mlg./ 1t.U1£mbly equipment and medical instnunentl. Applicant must be able to 'vork a11 part ol a team with englnttrs and tool· inz people, to Can')' a deaia:n t h r u \\'Orkir\c drawings to completed oper&tlfli' units. A minimum or lhn!e years in the desi'n ol mechanical apparatus is enential E•cellent crowth oppor. tunity and lrilll'e be,. lits. • P b.. MAN I ·•"·I u-•--• 1-~·-··· •-p•·-n•l-MY ISUNDt ................. Jiit D•Al'TIHO lal:Vtcl .... -.... tuf er.ma 0 ....... .....,.., -..... UHDl!CIDED? , .... ..., .. -, ~ ....... ...., uuOA ISLAND ............ HIS l!LICT•tCAL .................. .... •Well Groomed appliance 1tort. Must be: C M Phone· 642.1265 "UHT11t•TOM 11ACK ............. IQUll"MINT •••TAU ......... M • A~-o I .. ..i ... Call' ..... ,, "I.could haw !~ • .1 wouJd . . . . l'OUMTAIM VALLIY .......... tt11 FINCINQ ...................... MU •u-ve · nea appe .... ,.. """' ha\'e:! •• l tboWd have'!'" SKIPPER SIAL l lACN ............... ,M,. l'LOO•I " ................ .,.,...., • A ..... -t I: converse "'10 AM--•· .. ~-_... LONI tlAC" ............... 25 .. •UllNAC:I 11 ..... , ••. St(. ~ ..... H me ........ V<tq • .._.._ Do )'OU klolta' to the "unde-45' Diesel Sport Fishlnc D•AMll COUNT'r ................. llU•NtTUll• •ISTDll•• with top busi.neu men. MAN'°'"'=A~G=~=•~="=-o=p~p=o~It'°. , .. _~., b · In eru· Full •. ·1· SANTA AMA .................. Mii & 111!,IMll"l•Q "" ~ 11th .,. .... ~~· Cam..i c1U '!' Why not ]O ISU, me poll ion, waSTMINIT•• ........ -...... :un GA•Ell!HING ......... .... Prefer Ale 1 v; CU • Fail« pt, lime. Car nee, 3J out team 1t Paul White Car. Factory work in winier. MIDWAY CtTY ............. , .. UU llNl•AL Sl•YICIS ..... ., .. 6'1:1 anteed l&lary of $400 per .. _ wk ...... _......, __ .. ___ __, d lo M . ·-----'d 11.ttTA """ MllONTI ........ »JI .. D•ADIMO. OIKU!e ........... ..... ..... of bua1 • ..-.................. ............ ...... e:ve p your true ainu:.i............. exp. re:q . C:OAITAL ................ OU.IS ................... " mo. + pel'Ct'n_.. . MA IDs Pe f potential. Earn cormnb.Uonll Skipper's lie:. preferred. P.O. LAQUNA ••ACM .............. :IHI ••IWM TMUM• ............... ., .. M M 1enen.ted that lhould * -rm, . or whil• be"i"" ..-feui.0-.. 11 .. Box 729, We&tminster. Cal LAGUNA ... u•L ............. :mJ •u• '"o'" ................. 1111 bri .... ave. income from $600 qua 11 r I e: d who en)Oy ... r•v ·~ MISSION VllJO ····-··-····ml "IALT" CLUIS ............... ,. .• •-" ..... k Ta...... trained, We will school you • TRAVEL AGENCY * IAH CLIMIMTI ........... Vll "AULING ................... ,,. to $800 per· mo. c lll1en5 ... i wor • ,_.•"• IAN IUAN c.Al"tSTllAMO ..•... 1121 tt0u11cL1AMINO '™ Call Mr. Myen 642-9t70 ne:w apartme:ntl complex, in every upect of Real Ea-nttds pa.rt lime girl. Exp'd CAL'! T•.t.MO tlACN ......... tnie INT•••o• ri1co1At'1fliS ':::::.,,, F ... ln .. -•·w Ne ....... rt Beach. Top W&gOI, late Sellinc. Independence only. ,,__..._.. OANA POINT . . .......... t1 .. INC:OMI TAll .. , ......... ,., .. ...... ...... ~ •1v111s10• COUNTY •·····•• ... l•OH, ~ .. Ilk. ...... , .• ,. xlnt frina;e henefits, ins.. can be )'OUf'S! Call Now! WAITRESSES & VACATION •IMTALS ......... ~ l•ONIN$ .................... 11» * Girl ,,Way * med. vacaUon. Write: Box Pleue c.all Doug Whilinz, IUMMI• 1aNTAU .. -.. •··• '" 11tsuu.T1M• .................. 1>11 "' lit CAR HOSI'ESSES CDHDOMIMIUM ............... IKI INSU•A"CE ................... tJI Good 1tat. t)'p ' \le!')' e M~8 The Da1q PUot. 546-5440. DU,L~;,.l!I l'Ul:M. ............ n71 lflllVISTtOATIMO, DtfrKll¥e ···" .. SH, ible i'O do exec .. phone* u•~s * ..__..:.... __ .. Full or part time. Attractive RENTALS JAMITO•IAL .... . . ....... •m P_, __ .. ti: tell! "uuu ~""'"-'T;'U• S LES ORDER with happy laces. TIIE U f • L-.1 JIW•L•Y ••l"Alll. 11c. ...... .... acreenlna:. UUll:U m · 21 A ply &n Brown' A ' 00 E , ___ 1 H 1 Houset n urnt•~ LAMDSCA1"11to ................ ..,, nt start $450 CaJl J0111 Ove1' ' p S Z • · ~ Wy, I Oaltl!llAl ....... Ml ·.OCKSMITK ................. ... ~-_;,_ ., ... -"I\:.,.· Motor Hotd, 3110& S. Cout CLERK McArthur Newpt. Bch. COSTA 1111u.":·.:::::::: ....... 11• MAID s1Y11vtca .............. "" .in.I""'• ~ H South J...asun& MIU OIL MA• .............. 11• MAS.ON• • l•ICS: .......... a» COASTAL AGINCY wy, Experienced in Ales or-WAITRESS: & nights a wk. MISA va1:D1 .... -.......... 111• MOVINI a ITOll:All ......... .. C I • * • u•m * * * 2AM 21 26 ) ~ COLLIOI llA•IC ............ ,111• l"AIMTl"O, h-"Mlfflt ...... 4Ut 2190 Harbor Blvd., .?. · IUJ'l der proceu:inr, maintain-7PM-. ( -yn • nL Ml!WJOO•T 1uc" ••......... .i211 l"AtWTINa, Sit• .............. .uJ GIRLS -LADIES FULL ..... TIME.n* ina: order lop I: l'f:COrda. ATTIC, 642-6842 aft 6'. MIWl"OllT HO"TI ............. 11.,.11 :~~!.2.1. ... ,HY " ................... , .....,....,.. "•w•o•T '"OlllS .......... ,.,.... ............ 11 • In --order dept Type 60 wptn on elect. WANT TO EARN IN YOUR IAYSHO•ls ................ :rm PU.ITl!•INO. P•tcfl. •••Ir .. .... To \11ork ....... ne · de: Al Fire C II P ol D ..,. oovi• IMO••• ............... :m1 l"LUMllNG ............... .... C.M .• office, .f hh • day, MALE . T phone . es-I •rsonn .,.... SPARE TIME? BE A WISTCL••• ................. ml ~IT ••OOMJN• .... 5 ••• , , ..... No typin&'., ~. Pa~ dl.lly. Phone ?.Ir. FREDRIC'S w I G •ER y u1trv1u1TY ll'AllC ........... mJ l"OOL 1111v1c1 ............. •m ~ w~ Ryan~·-(714) 49~9~1 0 IVINf ................... _,.ml POWEi sw11 •1•• ........... ttlJ Mwt have aood telephone °"""""""' " GIRL. \VRITE P .. BOX IACK .... ., .................. $1 PUMI" lllVICI ............... ..,. \IOlce. 642-1508 f.IATURE aalellady to ual1 for appointment 30, !..AKES OF FOUR ~~lj.,!lU"' .................. = :~~~~~..;.;.;.,".tt:·::::::::::: atomers with SEASONS. CROWN POINT, 1•v1NI T•••Ac:• .... -.•••.. nu l:EMOOELtNG & •El"A tll 1tJt GOOD Chrl!ll11l\ home with our cu IND. 46307 COIONA DEL MA.• ........... ml ••MOOILI"•· KITCNIMS .... •Hll blind m&n needs com· wallpaper ee:ltttion I: color TELONIC IALIOA ................... 1* sc111o•s 1KAaP1• .......... •t111 ' co-ord l n•tl nc . 'Some \VOMAN To work in Donut IAY ISU.NOI .................. ll!WINO ............. ... -panion. wases 0 Pen· ... ,,-,,.., .~. d, 91 rab1 e . Ind .._:__ LIDO ISLE ............... m1 1n11te MACK11t1 a1L'A111s '"' 541-$62. .. -.. •n~ shop, over 21. No phone V.L90A ISU.ND .............. DW 11,TIC T.Ulll(I • ._.. &k. •• IKI Flexible hl'll. Vista Paint h •Call pl e. I e. \Vinc:heU'11 Mawl"OrT WllT .............. ms TAILO•IMO ........... ,...,. L.gun. •-ac KUNTIMOTON l llAC" ....... :MOI Tl•t.11T£ CONTaOL .......... •tn Corp. 827-2111 De Donut House, 2947 Harbor "UMT!NOTDM NA•IOU• ..... Ml YILI, Cennftle .......... -... •n• ·-·-· opportunity employer Blvd, Costa 1"'1esa l'OUNTAIN VAU.IY .......... Mii TILi:, U11tltel11t ............. &'11 HOSTESSES MATURE couple to tnanaa:e ~....... llAL lllAC" ............... MJI T•I• Sl!•Vtcl ........... '"' * * »30 unltll, H.B. Adult bldg, SALESWOMAN. ma tu re . WOMEN. 18 and over. Part OA•O•M ••ov• .......•...... :101 TILIVISIOM, l:tMln. lk. ... 191J DAY ., NIGHT 13 YEAJtS 01t OLDE1t lOMe llACM .............. 1111 Ul""OLSTl•Y ................. lttl no pell. Rent plus. 84lhl927 aood pay, knefitg. Apply time. Good working cond's. O•AMOI! C:OUNTT ............. :NII WfLOINO ........... ~ in -rson 'Da~ Intunational, Apply .. ..., N. Broadv.-ay, IAMTA AMA .................... JUI WINOOW Cl.fAMIMO ........... •nr • MEOIANICCl.us "A" .-~--... WIJTMIMSTI• ................ M l! JOBS & EMPLOYMENT I'· .. --. ---··· ~-nn. So. COut Plaza. Rm. 410. S.A. from 4-6 PM MIDWAY CITY ............... M1t ••• W••T•D -"" 0 -. v-n ,..,.,. r" SANTA ANA MalOHTI ......... Ma ~ • ........... . position for re t pon1 i b l e SALESLADY. curtain, COASTAL ............... 11• 1g: ::~~:g: ·-........ 1m man -.. w•.., bonu• pl·-dra-ry • M"'· Udotfs School,.ln1truc11·on 7600 LAOUNA tlAC:M ............... r1u M•• & WOM•• ·····"" • 1 ' ...,, r-Ii' LAOU"A "IOUIL ............ 1!1J ICNOOU & '"IT•UCTIOM ... UM I: profit sharing. Under Home P'urnlahinp. So . s'::.'s~~:~':.·········::::: .. ~1 .101 .... ,,. • ..,TIO"···········*' T'f'COnlltruction. \VW ~n Cout. Plua. ITS YOUR MOVE SAM JUAN c.AL'tlT•ANO Jf21 TKEAT•1u.L . .. ..... _,.,.. ?ltay Ith. Write or call Ray 5750.0I c:A1"1nuND 1oc:111 .... -... mt MERCHANDISE FOR Ap .. Ly IN l'EJtSON ...__ ~"--" <:fls7 ~ S ......__ OAMA l"OIMT ..... ,.,,, .. ,., .. 2141 SALE AND TRADE ........... y . ..:n-JOJ • """ ......... at Salesma.n, mllTlf'd, Product COMDOMIMIUM ............ ,,. * IMMIOl~TIELY * Hwy. Laguna Beach, Calif. -·'•• •••• plu• ---···•. 1,. AIRLINE & TRAVEL oUl"LElll•I VM,.U•N. ......... 2n1 f<U•1o111u•t: ........... .... Reuben E. LH 151 E. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH '-•==~~~~cc-'7""-= ...., ..... ~.-•..,... IUMM•a l:l•TALI ....... , .. mt Ol'l'ICE ,U.NtTWS ........ Mii ~fEDJCAL Secy-Front or. reimbursed (also fee jobs), RENTAL) 01',ICI IO•ll"MSNT .......... 11 ITOllE EOUll'MINT .......... MH llce, 10ml! b1ck, knowledge: e&ll Ann, Wntcllft Penon-INDUSTRY ""REERS Apts. Furnl1ht4 t Al'I:, •t:STAU•ANT ........... .,. of all types or med. formg. ne:I Apncy, 2043 WestclW "" O•NlllAL ................... 4111 ~~~s::g~"'::X.,i ··-....... =: '1.n Tu.' 'l'hura Fri Drlv N.B •~~ -C:OSTA MllA .................. 41• 0 ,,, .. l&La ·······••· . . . . e, . ~-· •u MIU v••01 ................ 411• FU•~ITU•I Aui:Tio···········.n !I·~" 6·JO • ., 1~ hr Fashion S •••PO•T 11AC1t ............ ..,.. • ········"" ·~ • • .,.. • .J • SALES: Join QU EEN ' MaWPOaT "••olfTI ........ , . .,it AL'l"LANC•s ................. 1111 Isl. Send ttll.lmt to Daily \VAY 'S hi&:hest paid fash ion • OPERATIONS AGENT-"llWl"O•T IMOllll ........... me 'MTIOUlS . .. ......... -... IJlll ,...,=;;-.,..,-;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;I Piiot Box M-29. counselors. Receive to S500 • TICKET SALES WISTCLll'I' . . .. ......... ,all ~~':':::L ~~;~':,~m· .. ·····::: H OT EL* I NSPECTRESS ONS ~=~~·::•v -~~~~.:::::::::::: ,',""oos • o•oANS ...... ::::::1u1 (Female) Very pteaunt Men wa.nted frtt •:ardrobe. No. invest. • RESERVATI IAST ILU•~ ............... 00 01 ' ....................... .. kiJ\i conditions in tint CUSTODl•N No collectinr. No deliv. •AIR FREIGHT-CARGO COIOMA o•L MA• OM r1L1v1110M ................... .., v;w Call Mt-lltlO "" 968-6219 or 536-12a7. •COM?ilUNICATIONS •ALIOA ...... :::::;::::: ... ~t:~a.~~~~~~iit": .. ::::: ... ::: class hotel. lmmed. opening lor reliable ·-·vEL AGENT -•AY ISUMDI ................. QM C:AMl!IU.S & IOUll"MINT .. ~-1 ,,. SALESLADY ~r. I n •n.tt LIDO,,... . ................ f#l ..... '"'''. . .. . M.1·1 ........ with Nick· ~. mll1I with previous induatrial a:..'<)'<' IALIOA llUMD ............. 4:111 ' I ............. .... ,_,.,........,ER COOK fol' I I I Xl t ladles ready lo wear. Apply • • • "UNTINOTOM IPC" ............. ll"OllTIHO IOODS . , ......... -1reund 4111uallflc1tlen1 Hou.,.,..,~~ -jan tor al e~r ence. n · APROPOS, No. 27 Town &: Alrhne Scheols P1c1f1c l'OUNTA11t VALL•Y ............ 11 ~11m~t:::o~•,1• ... ,_ .. ..,. I ' nd I • couple on Udo tale. Muat \\'orkina: conditions, a:ood pay 610 E llth S t An 11AL 11ACN .................. 4411 ............. ... ex per ence • H •ry .. _ •-· wl-' rels. Pref. •nd ... ll'l•r• ~,.fi,. Incl. Country, ~· ?lton-F'rl. • , an • 1 LoNe 1u.c" ................... M11C. ,w,•,•,•.•o ................ 1111 hi ""-~ ..._ .,..,. ~r .., """ 1t•• _..,. MANOa COUHT'I" .......... ., ...... MAC" , at&. ...... ,., ... ,,..,y nP. drive. $350. Employer pays profit aharlna:. lOAM-CPl!ot . ~ IA"Dl.N G•Ov• .............. 4'1• LUMar• ................... ,. ... ,,. BOX M-4tl tM. Georse Allen Byland Ca.lit. InJe:etion r.101d1na SALES: Servi~ tstabllshed ~ ""M"'1'1• ................... ,, \1.~~:r.~ MATl:it'1AU ""·0 ·f,'J DAILY PILOT E ·-Son-Full•r B-··h cu•tom..... • The Newport • -..1owAY CfTY ................... 1• iwA's ... ..... . .::::::·,,,. Equal opportwtlty employer :::_· :~ · .uu., DJ~., c.~I. $145. wk. ·;ar. to atart. e School of Bu1IMtl • ~~!~:~.~~.~::::::::::: ~.~~~ ... "'~~·.~~~.~!. ----------1 HOUSEKEEPER. t tv •·In , ?1-IDDEL type WOm&n wanted C&ll Kl 6-6339 COASTAL ...................... ,. ~Tl ........................... .ae ~ onl Pr! nn ... ~· ·--· tab Full Featurca weekly refresher l.AOU"A IPCM .............. 41'111 DOOi ........................... . DISHW A.SHERS INltht•l * IUSIOYS (WMlc-., Nlthtol • APPLY IN PER.SON Reuben E. LH 151 E. C'OAST •nvv. NE\VPORT BEA.Of expu' .... y. v. . for ru b.Ion thowa. 11 ~·ct Es . er .... ,,_ UOUMA 9llOUaL ........ -... 4>11' MO•••• ....................... ... -_,._ ...... t -a1c al":-..:1 ...... 1 •• .... B b .. ..~ ... counes in the a .. llUI )'OU MIUtOM VIVO ..... ·-··-.,. LIVISTOCIC .. ... •vP _.._,,, "" •r qu u~ ,.. .... .::-&Cl!!, u N! mu ' • ...., a v;•A, net-cl i'O t the: job )'OU IAM CLlMINTI ....... •7U CALIFORNIA LIVING Enallsh. »7-1045 or 531...8513 will train. 5t0-.1460 .ruan.ntffd ti start. Call L a:e SAii JU.tit c.AllflT•AMO 4"1 ,;;;;;~;.-:;::;;;;:;;--A..-;;:;;i17.I ~-,45 wan CAl"llTIANO l lAC" .,. •u••••••.1 ............. 1'1• HOUSEKEEPER pp Y· i1 "°" Ol'flllA POINT .................. 4141 SWIMMINa POOLS ............ .... Parkhurst R• t lre.me n t ~. ..;,. n___... NB • Tlll't.tX. .ie. .................... 'ATIOS ................ -..... .,nu Jt.e:tklence. 9925 Al&medl, • _, .~°;;," e' · ~;~:'~~-'~-~ . .::::.::::.:::::::·::: ~~~:,, .. ·:·· .. ··:· .... :::::::: Foun1aln V.U.y. _, pslGlhlli -------RENTALS TRANSPORTATION u •• ~.u1~~!t!!J!.~ ·agency * SECllTARY * S-CR_A_M~l-ET-S 1.~~ .~~.~~.~1.~.-~lf~:~::;i:::::;;::;;::5 ---· .. ~ ·---1 s le Lind devdopment iexecutlw C:OITA 1111.,. .................. 11• IPllD-Skl IOAT ·::: .• :: •• ;: .... pay. "-nn. H\lftt. Harbour. ,,.,.,,,.._ •r• • in South 1 .. _.na oUioe re-NS RS 111au v111oe .. ,.. .............. llM IOAT n1.1L••• ............. 1m .... a.e_.• for ttttt empleyer -... • A WE ••Wl'OlrT 1uc,. .............. IOAT MAtl'!T'IMAMC• _, ... ,... _._. Uc qultu attracUve and uper. 1taWP01T 1ta11NTS ......... .1111 ••AT U.UMCM11to .......... :: ... RSKPRS • Employtr pays •nd the •PP •nt ienced tecretary •ith pid · . =~:,tHO•~~.:;;;;·::::·:: r::~·~.J~.:O. .. i•·:'.·.:-: .. := ft'!! Ill Drrrffr Dr •• N.B. penlOnlliiy Ir: top i kll13 in O\'ttdo -Brood -Thick -u1t1v••11t'f llAllK ........••. m1 IOAT sa1:v1cu .............. ., ~Allen ByllDd >.zency '42·3170 • Mf.274) typlna and SH. t to 5:30. Weue:l -WHO DID t~~':l.,,., ":::::::::::::: =~ ::.."::tt ............... = DISHW.ASHEI\. PART-TIME 10S.B E. ]6th, S.A. S47-03IS Nunlrtl Te:I: !\.flu Hano for lnfo. "Men Aft •tranae. A m1,n COllotlA OIL MAI ............ llllttlM• IOATJ ::::::::::::::: ,,. N N -1··· ·~-1111 who hadn't kilaed his wife .................. • .............. _ ... IOAT MOVI• ................ .... Swia a.kt. -· ew. HOUSEKEEPER I Live-Jn, • ,..,.,.. ..,.. -................. IOAT JTO..t.e• .... port, N.B. ,.. d•••. -mo. c·--LVN. 6:Jt am. J -. In 10 ~an ahot a MaJt \VlfO L1DO •IL• ................ , .JJfl llOATS wA•T••".'.'.'::::.:-.:.:: ... • _,, ---· r•.. DJD IALSOA llUHO ,, ......... _,lall &l•Cl:A" ............... llil D-~--for nrrt. Call C'IS-G893. 2 dap per wit. Relief · ""'..,.,...,.. 11.t.c11 ........... PLY•• L.1.hOfll .. .. •••• " ·-__ , Cott ... Art 51..-•OUMTAI• VA&.Ll'f _ ........ '41• MOllLI lfOMU .... ::: ...... :: Minimum 2 ynn: exprtrt. enoe In la)ioot I: tqilnc of &J1 'lo'Ol'k fOr printed circuit boards. c.n Pononnol Dopt. (7141 494-9401 for appointment TILONIC lndntrltt HOUSEKEEPER or helper m... ftUf'••· . .....,..... PAL llACll ..................... •ro• tlOMal .... -......... ms ~-~-.Call -t..-SECRETARY ....... _time At-Art lelllOft&, land I: aeucap. LOND ISAC ................... ..Dll llCYCL•t ............... =· --w..,...... .,...,.,,..,.. -, • ........ • , O•AMOS <OUlrTT ................ ILI CT•IC CAl:I ,.. M7-M21 IA.TH AIDI •• AM • tome)' requbu akllled cw-es, alms • truck ltlttrill,i .......... ltOft ................ 11 MIMI 111(11 .::::::: .•• :::· • 1 PM. 4 4ey11 ,., wk. rrtpOnducl wct'y. No prior Emma Blanlclnshlp A Joyce =~~:~"'~W .:·::::.::-:.:·: .. ::::~ =~:k~r:11 ............. ,_ *** n1SPECTOR. ni.a:htl. Will triln lepl exp. req'd. Permane nt Siller. 690 \\.'. 19th (At . ,... tAMT~ AM .......... ,_ ........ AUTO s1•v1c1s • ,.m·:::: Ma.c Crep Y•cht Corp • u hr 'f'k. $3.23 per hr, mona) SC.1689 OI' ~. ~~:r .. ~ N~~.::::::::::: ~:i:t:~: ... :~UIP. :·::"·::: lat Plactntla. C.M. NUlllSIS AIDI • 11 £xp'd with IBM Exec., tne AtASTER AR.Ttsr will teach tOoMTAl .................. ,.,.. TIIAIL•as. .,_., .::::.: •. :·:. ,....7•,JI 0-E••'•, 80' wpni. shard\and tlO Inti.... .t.-..i .. \ LA~= :=:L ·::.'.'.'.'.'.'.',":'.= CAM,IQ ............. _,,.,._, NO matwr whit• 11, )'GI ""' r• _._-Mir. N.B. P' ~-"n'Y n pe:non LA91 cUM•lfn. mt Tl\ICIU ..........•• -........ . ... .._,,...._ .. l'ft\. ~ ....._. Uft. 291J w Cout HWJ SPICt C: JUAN aP.miUii'"""'"'ms ~ •• ,, ..... ·· ""··-····"'' c:aa ..a tt wttll a DAD..Y Call fr~ t am 12 No. 3, Ne~ ne:ach. CA,tlTllAMO 1uc1t ...... ,,. ~=:-.~~'::AU :I .. AllK LIDO noon onl,y DAMA JIO!ltf ......... .IHt JMPOaTIP A\lfM ......... .,,",_ IT'S WON --· h D"' d'~-,,,_. .......... -·-UAL ISTATI, ll'GIT CA•S .............. ,. CONVALISCENT o,.,rv uu t e uu.. ~"\ ..._,o. ........... ., ,,., ____ I A11THtU11o cu.11ic• ........... u maey ~ ta appllal'ICll )'OUf ad, thin •It bAct end v.nwl IAC• CAllt. tool .......... tat HOSl'ITAL .... _. ,,_ ...... -..i.... T•IPUl.lf,,-.. ............ 4 .. ,..,. •UT• avawn: .............. • ~ ftnf In the v•-ft«l u.ttn to y,. ,,.,.! COMOOMQll~.-l..l.""'"r•• ....... •ui"OI •AlfT•B ............ . .Ada. a.de ~ no11tl Ntow! t l l lllTAU ·-··v ... .., ............. CAU ...... -.......... 1 L4i9"¥ Beach llfll z.,111 ~ .......... ·-------'(1141 641411 100M1 JIOll IMT ............ -AUTO LUii• ............... tlll ---· ~·----~·----- . ·-~ ·---·-----·-----· ~ ---------------.-··- . • Tfwrsdl.y, AprU JO, 1970 DAILY PILOT • ~ ..... ~l.,.,~ .. ~D~~~!l: ~I~~-r~;"--_~No,:~~8000~ ,~Au~m~t~~~~~R -1-~ltrl.~~ . ~~i~io~~~~~ . .:~~.~~ !~~ ~::and LIVE. ·lat'. ~~!J -. ".t010 ~-,.;~:.~r:::i..::::.._•_,~.;-= .. • r• , ~ _•_••• ·~ ~ , IOOO! FufiJ,.,.... ·-. eGO Mltcel...,_. -~ I . --o!t, .... ,.S . SWIESE KlTJ'ENS -lmmo.11~· Doflvtry . . ..... ' " .fi.:l~i!i:e~w .. -· 'l_..o!dJIO.' • 'e 26' SOUNGS e 11 • 11r 111•LI" ,uay1c1:.. ' . . "'' *' .'lllClftlll -*-. 2 bllt w/wht ,.. ... "'°"'· . ~ ' . I 11.,.,bl·-.......... ~6S5 11 · ,, .. ~.,. ~ _.,._ "'-' · · · . -S . ~ •. · -.,, .. '1., ,, • :. 1 -..... 4 I ~ .... ,m.. s1 ....... ·Kitten $15 11 .... 1 ..i~ ....... : .. ~ All Brend. N•w Furniture r•furn•d from Mod•I , • THE ,'U &-B ... -.,._·'_ •. ~ ·•,_· f'RIDAY. ~: 7130 P.M. R~ ... ifiv;•H:-lb'rkn. 1rou..e broktll.· e122' TEMPEST• Hom••· d~0tfl!!!·~nc•ll.tti0ft! and cfftpltyottudio1: ~.. . .. :MAV 1ST ~alt 6 pm 5(2 ······•··· ~ SP.,ftrsh '&Jt'tHIJterr•nun Furnl~re c (jlt New ud '•·ffl!Cl••ia!Nnl !J1ll"l$il 1mvwt~Rt:l Doe• ·ms Paclfk: Yacht Sales 6"J3..t.511t 9J~.a;it•-•~•••(!) "«••. ,.9. •349, • .w f111.oo fURNITU·ar.,". FA.· T .,.., ~ 1191! ·iW"~t,,.~l>Jlii ,.., l(EWJ!ORT 1s CB. .u '-G•·;~·· Sl!"•lsh Cuilom 101• w/nietth9 lo•o •••t . · ..,,.._~' ,, _ . ' : · ,.,.;,.• ,d~ ,....._. N', ..,;: i ·Wbltt'{int,,-inlt<is, LABRADOR Pupp~~ s-. 'Dt....,,, ss, yacht twlo~ dpo Cholco of li<e.t .flbrico, rtg •. '419.91 .. now W~.00 ~~-" ';-;;:tr. f lablo.<Olor TV, ~llqn t~blll/wbt:~att'-:-'ldt· mM, AKC, OFA, tiljil--v~ ,bl& v.111-trlr, Saw ~oith Plolo'/ seti -.. ·--~ ...... ..:.;.. • 75,00 S.-... ... _........,,,.f)i;al!I , ""°"" "'*"·-'P'·.L~ ·~~ •tt.h., tl>lli. t"tli!er, t ·caL Xlntfield&sbowb<ckrrnd. 8 moe old, llk<-new. . r.11 O.cor Tebl. u,_,,,, ft·g ... 9.95 now•· I' ·18 00 ........... +. } : i" ' ! ,.v .\ e4 ~~~tJ]'op 6 . mo ot'lli .. 1e·m1\e Pf:KE..a·Poo puppies ~I ~5(1. \• ckamltcr. bot' 'blld. I Solid O•k En Tobi's & Coif .. T oblol --~·· 11:00 ..... ,,.... .& -.i ,~. -~~~ .~ •the,.. B<(olv:Ue l'!lh lee<!, 549-(813 • " • ,. ' , 'l"l'' Term. avail,"~. , < A mat, .U. 1&Ulng oloop. '63 KODAXk 100,. ;q;M· & Sp.onli~~ .. .;s ... ,.la~pi,t<g.49.95n.,;"•'zz;so ' ~' "" <\l"et1e'-"'t, .CU.tom ma<!tl Wel....:.,,.r!WblP((OI qilx. bealt!\Y 110. l;ot " ~ u:, NEWCATTRAILEll •• $100 ~ lank &, ~ - · 3 Ro9m1 Of ,jior;eous ·Sp,n11~ F.rnilute . :: 3 ROOMS: llvlo9 . r0.oin°Dloetlo '& •droom, W....... al<l chests, !¥' Heilt!\Y, ~. iOlw i>9lng ternoon. 18'1f """'" 'crt. p.t NO? OJNGHY ••••.... s:IO O>_mplete!)o "' up lit• illrL lw11 r19. $12951 S•~rlf1cel $425 t , $160. Eij;eQ sol4 le .chair.sle•r.•r $41.50.1 Blue ~ 8'\!..,..D,~ Ola~ · home w/Jge yard E\res . M9--2595. -··-;-, · , ·, 12-rr.•SLOOP .......... PtO XlJ\t. cood, $C98. 557-UIS -R D 'FURNITURE '· '' · ••I•~ ch•ir $59.50. '\Sp•• oh·sef., I love "'-llc>ullrurJamii!o,Ma~' 54).9238 or'f!G.1'1ti iii ;l)lM~ BOATS HONDA '10\1 CB3SO a w11a '' ' '' ' ' ' ' '• • 1 H•h·wos ·•301', now •Ut ~or set. 'l"9old·solo 1re..e;,._2S.~·~c;io. 'pup•-,.;_,. '~ ••.•. ;, ~!,!~~:.~A;""~!',! im•i(...., l!l;'llB ~ old, 3"I mi 0Pd ss». lllblt llM4Nowpottll.lvd.(~H~rborlCoat•Me .. 0n1y h '$1 's ·-·-· ~ ··1 d._ "'"""' ~·d•"l ••.• ' --~·-""-.... 1111,.,..,... . I . Every-Nf...&..t 'til $-Wed., •-•. & • .. -' ,111 6-.& c eir, w•• $279,J.ftcnrf • in'l!'9' or uolilu • cbtlts • Dine"-• :.c.a lain. &!.set/ ~\ ~ with 6· Wu. ~MT. , 30t' ''Chlneae JWlk built· in trade for van or vw. · •• ..,.. .un... , , .m.ttre.u "& 1prin91, was' $JS. now~t.50 t•c~~ 1. ·• , • ·~ »'-.,.:;7 childre!lf tt,,..o.. ~ shots . Hoag Kong, eooct cond. 492-9577 • . 2 red'~' .... " 9old Sp~nlJh ,1ofi11 & love...... cbal~~~~~ 96~186 ' ' 4/28 JlA8.SET ,txiPS. AKC, Sired um. Call Peter (213) 1970 HONDA SL-.300 I Furniture ' . ~ 8000 G•r•s• s.1. , -eni WIS $3148, now ,,,,~ r high beck CJOld v1lvet ~~ves ... tlo~"~ low:i~ 'd5CKERt • 6. 1*~ ol d·; !3;~~~ =p&n-=t 467-4679 I Motosport. tm» ~ Xhtt 'WAREHOU · ch1ir, $7'. 1 high b1ck;9r••n·Vefv•t chair $Sf. and Muoi"MOREnG'1:.__ ta~r; ~.~· coi>d · · • 15· NeWpOl'\> Finn ·U.S. 165 cond. Custom mru $850. SE FULL HARBOR ht Cbl'lla t la~ 12 ft. Ad.,,irel whita :refrigeri1tor, left h•nd' 'WJ"""'S" AOC. W 'I , wltt hdOg; ~ chlidren. SHELTtE PUPPIES-TRI w/trlr , & co,m pa 11. Steve 545--2647 , sofa's, Chalrs,'Bann'a, Your Church. Maple platform door, 1ik9 new $1ff. 8i9 selection ~1bles_ A nU1 .· n . &ta-...rm; .. • ;\ :.. •\5/1 ~· A!<C51. ,,1!_wee~ ol!J. &autlful. Cal 67>7024. TRAILER-LABA.IA Choice· $69, Sofa's A-I..Ove. rocker & .iurn. dothes h I •• t• $29 95 H bl '-~· aeet. Khg Sz .Bdtm.'s Your books, ·mile. "Sat' ..-..: •• ,.' 1n9in9 emps, .,.. • to • • e•V'lf ~lc:a COME BltOWSE, 'A:l(oUND FLUFKY .~ 1~.l~te n, a~..... ••·p'---",_ l:h.-CORONADO 25 ~ Race-Mo~le / utility 3 r&JDI, ,.,,.._, __ ..,_ 'D.dw:-' 'UUJJ ., Spenish bedroom set, ,600-now $119.· lMJht· female\ 5 <fta. Wie&ned "''""'lAI'-"""" ..... u .. -....., OWse Gear rad10t, Slip 14 whls 546-588& •.a11....,...._-••• -'li:a, •loves, M. 2559 Fordham. Dr: CM. 1 :an&,S Newport Blvd, 1 .. , • • .lKC 331 u .. ~.....i1 A ' ,. • · " -·'-~ .__ .. -G oelc bedro·om set, $13t. Welnut ~edroOm.sets · • ~ ....... W..i cblld r-en • ._. ...... a ve.. Ave.ll.C..U-8J3..{l8l,,. '6TY·-··-~=~ ,.,...,...,~·11, .... ,,. .. n , -· uar-Rm~"GE ... _ •• • f . . BehiM ........i, •t.t ... _,:Mat'll U'llUl"I, ":\·-, , CM .,.,. -•n after 3 ...... ' . ' IUUlll.Ua .....,......, --~ anteed• Sacrifice •Y-----1 .. n -· ''"'"l'.U\ ~ ·-.,..,_, from $79 to $H, I 1voc:1do,bedt,o"'~ $139. ~T'f ~ 5.n...6976 · • .. • ~~''4/.30 · · ~ r M. 2 -• 169 rr-1~1. t • ~......, 2nd 9·36-4·30 129 E. W-II $9 Cost. Mesa ., * . ·Mfi..8686 ! .... '; .. SCHNA'~ N•-, -·••'at p C I Gft')ft itepa -,_.. From Est.1te1, & :Model · · • • · Overstu ed ch1 ir1 , • . 0~. oAn.y'.9 fo'' , ,MEI>: glie1 toY; -;Getnian uw:..n. ... -...... _ ower ru MH ... ,. ..... bike triller, $125. ~ Homes.Terms! -_Ave .,OxtaM.na. ' 1 . -?~pherd ",m1'~.~.Love1 ~~· Call: '69 LUHRS 28' Cabin CIMATTI 150CC--NEW · Repo&n1110n Center Applia nces , ll,OO 1111 H--·· ot. Jflll '$1., • •1 '36 F9RD wlabbooe 111>~1<1 children, l\f, w.i.lt h ~og · DALMA. "IANS Crulrer -P Chrysler.,.. Muat "11! S"'J: -, Mk-5711, ' .... · '· • • end, completely re.bui l-.t:;ll 89S-007S ' ·~.-: •. 4/3o. I Cruises' I) "ltnota, radlo,1,,..:;.:;c,_:,::~-'='~~~ 619 E~ 4tb St, S.A., , so. COASI' KDUiY Cotta M... •• 14S.:M17 •. with wbeels'$75;' Almost like 18 E-i·OTI Fi1't B'LA'CK AKC, Ch. 1$tlt.• 642-1931 ~lephooe, anchar, winch; 67 HOND~ 00. CUstom ..... REFRIG. 6 _._ i..-wM ... hu credit TD'a 'le ' demo 0 w "'··-n . 30 Sa ... ~A~ .... • .. It o" .ed. c.......... new convertible~ sleeper 11 FEMALE La"-Aor mbc'•ll ~·ll"V TeJ'Tlen • AKC other xtraa. Xlnt cond. ~.~ ~;,,!200 u• -·~· ' pen: .... ~. ~· ' --· ~~ .. -..,..,• --....:,,. rcbiillt '''""'for ' , . -~ . . -·· ' -···~ 5et. J,.eatber rocking chr. models ol new '70 .Kirby · ··~· .... "' . , :CJ.: ... nm: old.-loed wa~ ~p stock, arna.TI, beaut $11,500. &K-5983 -· , Mapl.e couch & coffee tabli;. .Classics, 25% oU. Fact.1 ~ l • ~ C.oivalr . $10. f:f B wlndOW 1 .83;.l-0106• ·. . tl30 coatL Slud avail. 641'.'r.7335 36• DIESEL Cruiser Dbl KA WASAla Buahwt:.dler 2 oak nd iabl warm'L PH: 536-1Sll/222 casement complete with )Vin. 1 • · Sl • 6 175, brand new, .te. tbUI ' veneer e · e,t. 5th St/ H.B. _ .. dow SS. 'MS:'t219 .. · :f'REE puppies. be-..gle-I WHITE Toy Poodle StUd cabin. Fly-bridge. eep11 • 20 miles Sac. $.f7S. gg....an. BR seL ;175 or I e I I MAr · · • coclrer tnbf; 6 wb old. To Service, ARC. ~ Fully equip. Xln't cond. r .:;..;c.,.;.:;·..:...-'--'---'--.seP@l'ate. 646-5461 lq:NMORE Model 80 ituto. Television ~ Mlscelleneaus l600 TRAILER axle-3 w~ i: good bo,me1 .. ,'.: (1) 847-n'IG ReadY to go, ;9500. <U4) '66 H.AltL:E;Y CRS llOCC. 1 LIVING, Din., Bdrm., Furn. washer, xlnt cond. ;40. COLOR TV RCA 21" Screen. -' .,. U ~ good tires, 15", Df.fk l"09nl 1 Tffi.:.la54 · _ ., • 4('1J GERMAN Shepherd ptlppies, 9fi2...359'I' eves or wknds. ~ry "'~U:Ul take ~ ~reo, Color 'fV, dfe3ser, Frigidaitt elec. dryer, xlnt Xlnl Cond.. ';iso, caµ • e· '-CA$Jn • equlpmenc, .c~mpl~~& .• AKC Buset hound. 4 Yr cld purebred, beaut. Ma\41 '$«1, 2S~ Boe.i 4 MO'U'ing off ~.Call . . ~ ~~t:~tcb~-= ~;so. '847-&13 or ~40 Con&ol Danish -·· ·~.:·'For--f ---~~~~~. i:=~-~mcif~s fema1e~.6U-&f14: --~~bo1t~~st~l$l_OCKt.:,~.j~-:-1nbond. ~ 5i8--86ll G.E. auto washer: late ~.~kard ~ll. Call FURNITURE · p,lete witli ~Iler A-~~ ·~o-8638 ···-~ -~ • 4130 GREAT 1D"ANE ~ c;one ., · · * 496-a92··• SrAR -iOI to C.ntinenl "i"'•I. xltt! oood. $65. ,.,,.. 8<7-5810 aJt 6. , ~,:;' · ~~w, . ~ ' '~di 0 '· $'Ll'M'LIJ "'i:;;..;'~ alone. · • , B~~>).m , " • Bea~;.:.• ~howl Y&JMba, 55 1 Dirt 8llta >IJtl Howetul or beautiful fri..:r:-~C!Ohd., $5!5. 1 • • . _ LADIE! Dlll!lond D lnnet 1 Please tak~ ~·~ve Jt a • AKC TOY POODLES • ~ . ooDil._'eXpart. chamber.-....., ~-~t ?~ Iurni~. USED A·~•--... TV'•, Hi-Fl & Stereo 1210 e ~ ~ J. e Ring, set WHS ;1!4 W'at ~~· ,SQme _..~ hair'. MALE PUPS Speed-Ski 8oi1ts 9030 xtras.UXl .. f75.l'9T, l'l'"-'<""""'" "" ~ • ~ ,. --di&mond 2 dial'Mftl)J ·536:-9589\n!ght! "i 1 ~/~ '$50. ,EACH 84_~742 3 PC: naug. ·den set (couch, all &'llarantttd. 'Dunlap's, _ :PA?rol ~~-~ac~. M ~~':" fuat on' eaCb aide. 'BLONDE Terrier Beagle,. g AFGHAN PUPS AK'" 16' GJa.splir Avalon, 80 hp Triller, Travlf tC2S 1 chair aqua, 1 chair UlS Newport, C.M. se&-7788 SONY HP -580 ~o inc,tf, &oOO _f"Oll!litjol! _po. Btilltant:cut. saCl:l fl CtjJ wk's, parttatiy trained .. 9142 . 11 Wks. Termi, Ms.5452~. Evhttude w/American trlr.l _____ .;,__,__ __ 11 ~)" $100; Blk .reclining WE ST INGHOUSE auto. System, w/dual turntable, Duck feet me(I, $5. ~gauge Re ly.'to ' Box "P360, Daily , Mallalo Dr.,·' •H .B. like ~w. 'many xtraa. -ALPINE chair f75, 540-~ after 5. washer, good oond, $80. 2.140 AM/FM. Roberta ta Pe shotgun 3 incli ~ber $15. PH~t . · , , , 1 962-9759 _. · 4/30 ) · Pe~ Pu p p I e 1. ,::6'1S-3216::::;~=~~""'""°"'° HOUSEFUL ot new model Elden At B CM deck, 4 tipkrs,.new Xmas Fishirtg '.roct "&:'redae· reel . purebred, 6 \OOI, males. 16''GLASPAR AVALON, luniituie Reg' ;683 HGT~~·-: ~top 496-2896 540, no; Call~ after RfX',K HC!U~D~~REE AFlmCTIONAl'Jil -:y oung -$30/~ •. Call 5G--4012. Shoreli~ Jraller . Call • =e ..,m,' sfM...4417 o~ 6 FI'. Walnut ton!JOle stereo. 3:30. 2145 Bayport ~'W ,,-7, FOl1allihc ·unit 4!~· -bier: m,le i,cat. ,~,o~~~l\.a-J red AOORABLE purebred n..cb-m.f369 atter ?PM. VACATXON ........ freezer. Good oond. ·m. Ne·--'D~~I. ').I r. CoqJpleje ~ fbop., ·Siamese 1.Y."-JNltkl ~ :"!. ~ $ 'J'RAVEL".CENTER. 637-6200 54s-.t897, 436 lla(nllton.. Or!· Nearly ne:w $400. Private "'l"':' ~ ... •-' , , Cb&iie tn.• ~ lill' draw. aood:.bofue: ~ 1 5/1 diltPd puppies, 6 1'11:1, $2S. ·:"'~ -·. , ~~ S'.Sofa never tised, quilted . """"·Call: 1128-831& ,v~ ·8~'1,1 Ing. Open 7m,.10am-<pm. AM going ., .Euro,,;: muot ", • · 5<i-l9ll ' Boat Slip MM.Ing 9036 E ... I, •Goldon ,..._ , lloral. Sootehguorded $125. Anliquos ·1110 . IA!!;!/'~-unlt i» ··burner s101 Bo1aa Ave. i 'g!Vt•llway my SI-""~ TRANSPORTATION ' .. TRADE 22• slip Bal w tor ,.::J,."'!'~t~plne , ~-. IoVe sea.t $75. • • • • J.-.·.• .• • i Sporting Goods lSOO ISW1'.rith big ~tank, ,Mld~Cliz• • 189?·197.!> m tood llome .. Btwn•+6:30, loawa~"Yachts· 9000 , .~ _ _yknd ·~ ot ,bc!&t. Iv , , ,....,... • •• 1, K".t~-~ ~·~ . . . . . . . , & a.ft 9:30 pm. &16-8495 fill , . . . . ~~ ma.ltlt. ctean ,pwr boat orSdl lt.:r"8t G10lt caai:: MUST Sell household tum. Some new A beautiful, 11>me oldies but goodiff. Some old " beat-up. 646-0.12 7-EC. dl11 nn set, gd cond. $100. s...pe. · patio ae4 ...-ht. wrought iron fl(). 644--3>58 7'Quffn Si HldHbod ;75: 54!>3075 GRAND OPENING . , SCUBA GEAR · 9ti:ri.gf, . Pli.ce """ (O""'Mng Misc. Wantid ... 1610 ·2 BeauUfltt Joni·h.ilittd kit· ~ •• -only.. 673-7475 e~ A: plete ·~V vehJde ~ Nimrod tank valve hameu o:JOl:hea " ~ 19ab Into bed "·. · • . • • · · ' teM, 1 black •" silver·. 1 19' THOMPSON Lap Strake wkends. center , & regula~,\$60 ·~plete_. "'unit Jtf '6e' rppved· easily. i:-urn 1ture i ;A.ppl,11nc'!~. black & 1Vhite. 1 · wb C&bini aleepa 2. De Pt h Mocrlng wm• Sloop 8353 Garden-Grove Blvd,~ 545-0184 r Price m, .~l W-!l29'l ' ' ,WA'.1 tEQ,,_ . , 548-3842. • '515 finder, Uu.b toUe~ 2·12 gal S2l!OO 534!6686 ' " . · ... _, · · · . Top ,cas~.ln 30 ~utes · · · .. , gas tanks, tandem trailer, .* m_ 'HI.,., a.~ .. .: Sat. May 2nd -. ·S·rr~ tofa It ~e-ileat,·,wh1te, l'ut Courteous Service . .LONELY 9~n ~s lov-no molor f150 or take over '"~ Oosed Sat, Open ...........,. ' , Nm.-.· a.nliQues. Mink Ask t~~~mi ·Abocit Ull'. 1· L.ong .haJre4 .kt!t~(h ·24· -~LA.sm.ON U67 Carib-~cr;4ft,---:-r:: '~ I 537411 ,Authentic lmpon.d. ORDER NOW • .,_utumn Ha!6 , 81:ale, pd. Call C'hucll: S47.s?tt,dan.,.,_•.5'Mh3828 ·· · bean 160HP 1M'l't: cruiser CESSNA111!il, new palnt & lO AM-5 PM · Ml1celli1neou1 8600. · $560. Chandeliers. lamps, · :li}ef.. MoRE ' · J ing home; 8 Wks .oJIJ, y,Jloll( $.?' 86 ~ mo/968-1542. -, ' Antiques • FOR MOTHERS DAY $1600, sell $&i0. J ~:unere . Eves "& Sun 639-7649. ' I, J..:ABRAOOR I G e J m an · eape~ttyo.-10.'-L>t.s ~t extras: windshield. &-unual.--850 ----• OlVAN & match. chB.ir,'t.an From Holltnd_ ~ Mothers~:.-withchlldrens sweelep. fur !0 .•r~. WANTED: Twotui'nishedof· Shepherd,··male. 31~ tnQll, Xlnt cond. A-fust sacrifice. S.M.O. Sac. $3500, 54~T;iJS Stream Line 70 nauga., xlr'lt cond. A buy, •Furniture, Clocb, Glau, birthstones. .Beaut. custom Aquarium. All xJ. I. Misc.e · flee suites, nautical or 1 Miniature shepherd, female, Best over ;4,495, Call ---Ttrry•Nomad•O.sf1 $125. 6T"a-4422; 83,l-2950 Sea F¢ng lteip.S, ~ made rings, necklaces . & • ~ ' marme; desk!!, &ha\rs & ( 7 mo·. 646-2620 5/1 644-2876. · Mobil• Hom11 . 9200 Explorer Motor Homes (;:=::;,,;=:====I Wheels, Copper&:~ •• " earrings .set w:lth opals, J'\I.. .Q~..fiize bed, &Melli, tabies.CM:....~7cir64S:.'r'"67. :s PRETTY 'PUPS, 6 wks 24• T ,.,_,,~ .. r lleautlf"I · · Fourwinds•WHkender · A-.4. bie!!I · hir· "d ·alt for .,;35 ~ ~ · · . ·· '"nu-.., -. ·----~-, 1010' 01~ World ~niq'ftS es ia~tbe U:EC =.dwr $15 '. Chest of . , ,, 'old,ci;ed· s1~dm~ breed, throughout, 2.hrson ntiwi85 BAY, l:-IARBOR TRATEL 141W.Santafe$1. W, r.ianiu. Lapidary clrawen 110, K••m•'• FREE TO YOU . ··~-2 •." ome5~i ~1m:eptor,$3!95 • MObllo"H.,lne SOies '"'·"ILER. SAW C?fflc• Furniture u~· steel ~*' S39.so, ~ POliture chain $1).50 &: up • Used 2 & 4 drawer flllng cabfrl.ets • Used wood desks McMaha.n .Bros Desk Inc. 1800 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa * 6C-M50 2 ornCE de:skS, black metal w/chrm trim, 2 Chairg. Xlnt ~ &12-9730, 548-0720 ! Office Equlpmont .8011 ' Placentia, Calif. eqWp., rough ,, cut atones, wu&r &· dryet, both-for . · . , 1 . •w *6'f.4.:U68* ALL ~EW '70 MODELS '"""" . . l . u B11t w. or Sallla Fe tnoi. !or the rockbowtd, .,n 1200. 6'&-1'87 · • · CUTE mixed b""'1 dog,' 1. SIAlflESE KMTENS, ..,... FOi' """ till' BU<:h Crall NOW. O~,. DISPLAY 13172 Herbor Blvd. G.G. ·~I Station) Je~ .. ~~~:-~pp~ DECO R~OR 1.~ .. ~r~eda ~~58-1~;· has ill '~ ·~01: i!e~~!::~ =:~~=· !: 20~~e~o~.e:,~ Ga!t~n~~~ ! • • • • • go • l&\UO-· 'rugs.long $ag w ....... ~ti .,,,.,.. . 'prrl . -• ,~ ""5/1 ·~ ;. ......... ; • 537-4011 ••a , •I & casting supplies. " ~. c;Oip:, p,,.nge , BROKEN J'II:,ES of con-.. . . ')lasti . ....,... w ll'lr"t'!llll , ( P~ Spaces.A~ble I ANTIQUE sMoW Open Tues thru Sat, M . "Gre'li"'-.Ptpk!;, s'tr1P..e"s. crete. You""haul, free .• LIVELY 8 wk olc! ki~ 15'.. Sportlilie, f!!h-ekj: 4S ,1425 ~r S;t.. Costa Mesa KEN~ MARK ll. 1918. IO Antlquf.pealeri Sunday 10-4 closed Mon. 'Sac;rili~ 4X7 ~'t35, !t<7 $43, 546--43S2 .• : , 511 . & l black 3 mo. ol"d• lhort botsetJ_OWtr .Mercury, -u. 'ii ~lockEastol,HamorBivd. 231Ai Twin beds, tub & ANAHEIM CONVENTION FIVE 11,f GEMS & · olli@r 51.zri i.; coiqrs . . hall' k1tten, d ·'box·-tn.lntd tru, ;875, Mark55Tbunder-Coe~~. (\t4! 540-9f70 shower ... 73 lio;enae. New · CENTER LAPIDARY SUPPLY . ~-· ,~ • 2 ·WNEl>'.f rabbits wan~ &: Weaned. 646-80iiiaft 5, 512 bbU Mercillj G». 892-~ _ .. SPACES cond, in & out. WoWd om: 800 W, Katella,'Anabeim Rear of College Center UPRIGi'JT::'Piioo, 8.ntliJued, good home, tree to_ YM ~s1-.~e,~ fe1t1ale, XI.NT¥> ft. ,RunaboUt, 15 "'yailable . iri._ Huntington skier trade for 17' 01' 18 Jt MAY 1-2-3 Shopping Center 1961 bier w a on ' 645-0077 • • , • 6 weeks, ~ 2334 H'.P. Evinrude,. t r a i Ur~ Beac~ • C:OSta .rdesa'_1 nle-in top cond, 968-3259. t.l Fri & Sat 1-10, SUn lU 2750 Harbor Blvd., ll·A N~-5 '~te!iona1 FREE puppies. Part POodle. Wer:tmlnster -. St,·• -~. ~. many extnl.e. $.195. ~2517 tat ·p&ttr., 24' NASHUA, etect braloea:, I CHARMING tnatched pr of Costa Mesa * S49-2ll39 Clarinet 'au reasonable. About 6 ·. weekl old ; 64&-1773 · "1i/2 or675-2400 . t,1081LE HOMES % bath, xlnt cond., llpe; settees -1865. Black Moor DANISH Modern,·9% fi. aec-84n Lo~-J:?r: H.B., nr. 64&-:0796 _ 511 DA~~ GelJD,&_;n·'~ Shepllerd l?%' FffiERGLASS Inboard A:n~~··· fibe~~· _'available 4 .+. $800. See at Lakeview 1 atatue, hanging lamp, lace tional, Beige couch with Newman &.~m¥,lo!\ LOVA.BI.f:., youn~ cat •, Jemale, 5 too., all ~ts. Gamef!shcr, xlnt corn!., sea· lil ~very eize &: price~-Pmes Trlt Court. Big Bear , tmt Selectric typewriter,,=""""'"'=='=' 54!!-027=='==:= curved end, r e vers ib le CONVE;RTIBLE sofa, white a~tered,,,t.ree. tD eOod ho~e. Good~dispo1~_, ~.With worthy $1TIS. 6,3-9361. ,/9MlCRA, lfl,IC. Lake, Can be moved. hardly used; 2 type balla:. I. . cushions, good condition ;so, n8.ugahyde':isooTwln1sWivel 646-7096 eves. , . • __ /l lchJldrcn. 96Z-2321 5/2 26' CRRIS EXPRESS '63 "192n Be_ac~ Bl~. : K~NSKIL&Ji T-' $350. tr.5M22 833-2!EO Sewing MHhinet ll:20 double bed with Walnut c·hair11, sad.d,l e ·co Io r GQ9Q home W: ,!o"i11& l~ hE.\~L !,ii Siamese kH· ~ Cleari $4800. l{\µltlogtqp Bea.L.t ,5364511 N~ 70 ,MQP~ -~ A~N=SAF::..:O;;;N_;:E;;;.""'t=yr=-.~ld~,1 ~~=er~~:: 1'-ugahyde SZ:S. each. G~ yr old .1'Utty,.maro .c;&t l te111,:.~ \fhlle)T wlm okl *-673-02.81 * let~s ielfYourmobile 18 .~ully ·Jelf-~ Variable or Pre-set model. SINGER Aato zlg.::ZJ,g, fi tress&: box springs, (tall free;i.er~top refrlgera~or $40. 6~.AI!-5. _. ~11 in'eed goo d homes . \VANT~DI ~ ' home. Scotts; 914 N. HArti!lr, if.l. ·$560 new, sell $100. 494-718'2. mos. old. No attach needed boy I~) IOO<l condition mlts9s . H?~E Jo"ERTD.."f2ER yew. 545-7978 . _· 5/2 10 to U. Jt aluminum ~t. A)>,sol~tely,, n"o1 c;9st ~o you ~AILER-sleepa 4, tfove, ~°:s~-~· c!~~ $37 ~~ $65, ~1350. . . ELEC. stove, wheel chair, p1akA up. 203~ Cypfessf ~ TOI GOOD homt~ 2' kittens, R.J:Uona~e Price. 673!-9029 s &--IC· M~KIEL Es ~~· 75 !~ Ice 1'1h~ot, euy C•f1, R1sti1uri1nt 8014 or small paymt!nts.'51&-661~ PAIPO JcMe machine, M i ad~'g mach., 26" bike, Kqn, ta . ne. . _ .. 8 weeks, 1 pay, 1 bta;k. 7,6,. PENN YANG SKIFF, HOME :.~R'.0 R o p.u • ~1 , • l inch, rood . condition ;30, ~di. blocJs.!1: 5 Packard APP~OX 121A .. cu. ,tt. Gas ·548-7237 ;-· .. a/2 lisht .weight. $50. 12362.Bea.ch Blvd., G.G. 548-241718'2-«iOO , BOOTHS, Honesboe ;30 -Musical Electric guitar ml 11 Ing fires & ~ls. Ironer. Servel refrigerator. ;vou;. fRfiE _ Ge~n She~herd , •4~2192* • 6J6.-0921 or 893-2445 • '69 15' FlcM ·le Stream vaea· pUliman $50. AH with tables, ln1trum111t1 . 1125 strings & 45 watt amp, $15. 54s.aKJ1. . haJJl, ... ™1 aft 5 pm ,if30 pups, 8 wkt, 646.6289 aft 6 10 FT: Glassp&" boa:t. 'Xlnt BEACH )fl~W ~RK· lion tH:r, $£i;o. Call SU-1686 ' settees .• $5 per lineal foot. BoH action 22 excellent Sts';" fuR Sale: Fany.Iy mem· Need good home Ior all wht ,,pm, , 5/5 condlUon, with 3 HP motor. near 'HWiUrlgtbn Beach after 5PM. ;;; See Dockmaster, 3333 W. ______ ...._...,... 20 .gauge shotgun good con. ber1!llp to Ne_wport ~ach short hair kittens, 5 mos GERl.$iiEP. 1 yr. old , SlOO. Call: 5"5--S735 • 8':ta5' E!icparido 16' SANTA Fe T r ailer I Coas.:;;;';;H:=wy=·,oN;:,B;;. '====IP.A. System, 2 colum!'JB, 200 dilio!l' ;15, Call 548-4987 Teruils club by ~lvidual. 548-0813 4/30 1~ntle, need'! Jot! ot ·1ove, ____ 8x15 screened porch w/e~ ca~f prteed ltr ;: 1022 :i1 a::;P· i:~d~~~: after 3:30. 2145 BaypOrt dontac~. f\-Irs. ~ussc.J l . 8 kitten need good Mme·,·4 546-4564 aft.5 5/1 Sailboats 901g -2 ~r. family pet park quick la11.i;J55Cl• 96S3890 , Ga.rage Sall 536-8706 anytime . Wa:y, Newport ~ch 540-1620 •. , . black, 2 irtriJ>ed. 2 Bft'Y. 6 FREI!° Ho~ feftllizei', •Pick Spaee rent $\15. $1950 1966 18' SHASTA. SelJ o:in· : 1-----';;, r .---.. , LUDWIG snare drum &9tand FOR Sale ~ Family Mern· '60 CAD Engine ;85!. '.po wkS old. 542-1893 ~ ·up at 20311 Cypfts!i, Santa LIDO 14 _ t»rhj>lele •. A.M.S. 842-~39 taincd. CLEAN! Ba)'lbore THURS., FRI .• SAT & su,,_ · · ben;hlp Irvine Coast Co\ll)> Volvo eng. •$75; ~ 0..WlOO PUPPIES,~~ ho--, s, Ana -· 5/2 WELL built 12x55, porch, Park, 642-8662. i ;...i b t ZUdjian 18" cymbal ·&-try Club' Can be -~·ha.ed St -•cl> ne 175 ....... ..., ......... ..... . Good ~lion. $:651;1 . .. ... 1....... .i-..}~:==;:;:=:.=== Hard to .....,... p.taie, µ ata,nd Good co'!ldlllon l80 ' ,,_... . .... ~ .. ~ .. _ 1 " lovable sm &-lhed Breed. PETS i1nd LIVESTOCK 675--6050 675-3325 EVtJ. a;.. ....... , carport, tlel'! '"!">• • 'lata of goodies. Boll\ '<114 kir. ~th. 54&4i7l aft 5 PM. ~ 6~s.:;~· if qualitied, , ........ , ........ ~... . . . male & female,~ 413(1 . _ 17, SLOOP, t 1berg1a5 s: crpts, comer Jot fencf;d tor Jralltrs, Utility\: -• ~a: ·re~-S. ~~·& ~t::.s.· : BASS Rig, 400 w, &.15" bIAMOND ~ng •. la4i!'o i(41l s Darling Cock·a-~ pqpl. Ptt•i !Genel'lll 1 t800 ~ sleeP!l 2, trailer, S1700. pet, Reaa. Owner 8.19-7241. J.' ._A , 25 CU. FI'. side by side ~ Karat diamond.a M't , n •· g darlln Id"""', .,..,. .,,.,.,. · · ,. ' ~ , • , , · +· °''°ll< + 1969 SKYLINE 20X56. 2 Br. TRAILER Ford Im 4x7' 'l' a s, men'• 42 long. rpeaken, must se~ c-ap, ·w~. retrlg/tnr, 1% yr 1plattnum. Priv. ~-;250, "" g '"" · ~ r -• _ . , :. ,. ··· ''"'-"' · · ! 1 trg Chinese lacquer 1:ray 536-8706 anytime old·, w'bt $3!5. • ·M"'"""VOX, . 6'1' -.· · . , 1630 Mrrt!t~-"1' l ')130 fVR • ~e P.E'I' cliiekerW, CHINESE JUNK, 30 Jt. I ha. PDrch. Awning. Car-heavy $45. '55 Ford frnt ule '"I · • ! ~--~ d d c1$ t ·--'-A fertile port,-2,l!heds, 53&6386 Eve, A-whl.t$t;.1837~z A ! ilbfaid: w/coppet, mother o Martin 0-15 Gulti1r ' attreo/...,iO tape . cocnbo. I.AmFJ::. H ·-8.nic ~fit 4 Kittens, 6 wb·ol , weaned, u • ee8e, "'<If>'"'.,..~~ , Good cond. Be!lt oUer . -~ &: pewter w/stand, Sl2S. Paul • 641-00CS ~~ r:-::-:· · um . 548-68(2 .,1 4/30, eggs,_manx cat. 540-"1,).1 , • l2l3> J00.46.S3· !l.B. acrocs· from ocean, 2 T k · • --·~ cruvlngs, br&.Sli pc's, · white boots 6~N •. New this . ' -· · ' ' Bdrm, 2 ha, delwc:e, all ex-rue I T.JW , tal ... . ~ET Lett ~ CommrJ.-1 )ftt. Best oUe~I 6~ FREE kitlens. 1808' P0t1 ; 1 ~ . 2S1 SI,~ 'AlbatMs, free II.IP Adults 536-6478 l---------,r._~,Cloer '.~. J';."' .. .;.':,"';m. Pianos & Orv••• 1130 CODtracts.>f'98" 12"'1. •bar alt,& P.M . " ,, BarrnouU., N.B. 6#217141:.J. ~•I• Brio thril May. · • ""· · • •68 DODGE p U "'~ " 1399aq Drilis "'"--t ., .... 1 ~'s ·-· Alter&•·pm 64~102S 2hc-43 MOBILE'._Homt for • •, :!!Ming tcrttn. lmari bowla -~PIANOS A: ORGJliS · · · · ....... ~ WURLITZER .... manuiu. e ec-nii • L<" ' u" • · sa1 Be ch toe ti6n After · ·, ' ' l-1pJates. Very lrg collect NEW A: USED . l'OOS . Be!Ch mvd., H.B. tric-organ $l50. J>&ric .fed 642-2140 . 5/1 SEAL-POINT·Slamese )6' CliRYSL$R Sailboat 6 1 4 e. ~ a • w/~ abcll. F. ~ Of Early Arnet. gtnss pt'&, e Yamaha Pianos Orpns 84t.5tl4 -· na.ugahyde ea.I)': chair $50. PART ~km male kitten, Female 7 wetks old· $~ , trailer, x1M Condition. '1000 pm, work A . ~ , it g6ei Well. I: 'gfea13-SI.a& hen')' Organs ~Gj. ~ · nice $60. Pool table $.150. 4!»-2177 5 wks old. 897-6937 5fl , Call 646-8402 , -. oi beSt Gtfer. 968-1337. WILL trade 2 Br, 1 Bil htn, 16,000 ml. 1sn t, bad, at Kus. 'te:t,, er ·. 'coqee gririder, :·= Pianoe -Kenmore elec dryr ;35, 2 . . S. Broadway, .S.A. for tom Molan, its~ to be ~ elee te. Hard to linil • Koh1er .. Campbell . Michelin nd. tires & tubes * * PHrn:os oil · palntleat ' -· • ' • 1 • -• • ~· ' .... -• • • " mobtle liome. Aft ll, ~2141 had, . : .._. •'·-d<tk. , COA.ST MUSIC '!00xl4 $30. 615-0367• ~~~"'•,El•""':'~«>. ~~; . i'1 · 2 JIR.traJJ. er .. IJ) • ~--.· Kuat.olll Motors ' ;;:,.,, "" 'ili, ""'" • NEWPORT ,I, HA!tBOI: NEWPORT · Buch T•Mltl ~~. :'.~'" """': ~ S ~.A.R ~A'ZE:i('1< ~ , l\!\nl opac<> {47,!fo '1)0. 845 Balcer, C.)t!, 54il$JS 1. vUlt, Kola 'M!Od'-·~ c.o.ta J,ieaa'' * '~. Oub family membershJp. roP quality, 2 sett twin AlllS , · ~Q.AYJ. POL:LAN .... . ' usu . Adults on&. 543-1457 N.B. BOBTA!J.. Dump truetr.· 6 , tbt' •. , .. _long. 1, mal&.'18 ?en 10-6 Frt lG-9 .Bun 12-$· Quick ale. best offer. (213) 'mattreM ,. bOi Spfuigs . A u~•. ll M .YM.1>o11y J.~it;,Gu~ ·'.:;. sur. um yard, '64 Chevy, 2-qeed llX• .jewel Audemus-Piqoot UK -., -531--1150 "' ~4 plect! $80. 962-3446. ~1i1i, f, V . Acqw.d/111 '' ''•·''°!'" , . . oct:nt»ft'I> Blcycltt 9215 le. Xlnt cond. $l 9t5 . ~st watch wfl4K :&di\ • • e .& VI. ELECTRIC st Co ch a.; ~ ·"' : . · 7 TQ d•velOp mes-ro~, f9(F1,a'oy, 5-IW-40• 494-7508, s to 5 MoCi to ~. fll 17 ~ Etl!rnl """' chair. Patio;:;_ G~ owo fCEVERSIBLE biki~is by C. ;e;:n.s.!§il_j reodword:seormponHlngto~ 1.n,u.ii• .NEW HUFFY 2'1'' WOMAN'S Fri. ' JJ.4K gold strap watcho lBth HUNDRIDS , ' l9f' bttildin&•tn. mis):,.: 1 ~~\~. Tl"t our ' "' ~-T~,,,-101 ~:'Zod'C:,=:e: 61 ~· oc'f"""~"o 1 PR GIRLS DIC'fct£ .. SPY· '65 DOOOI \ii 1on Pie~, '&ntury yelk-w:. & J"05e gold CM New COM ~ns • &(a..i;10 , .• ~ ~ '_.,~.,, ··• · ·' · · .t2 e. 32WllM 62P.,Y. • DER MOD~ $48. 8' bed, RAii. Heavy dU .. ·, J.diea necK chain. very old:. . All Models . CLOSEOUT: st.ltcbel:y kits. i A M.J: kY·. Memberahtp • ' . [jl-~t) 3~ . ·~~i.:':'' :~-t=~ltd ~.~!'1 . , 642-1724 EVENINGS. clean $!m. ~ aft "'s l3.5!< Allstra.J.ial' oPll pendant GOULDS S~NTA ~NA Hook _. Neidle; 13064-, A \l'e~1't 8MDh Ten•i& Club, .---7i 6 1!• . "' »,..=., .666S-~~ 53-fMl pm .. _ " ;~tt!~: J::!~ ~-W. Main SfT-0681 Centucy, 1 blk ·~. d. G. <MOVini:) $425. ~. 4i1¥1NI ·1&.."-'"1 ·37~ 67~ UMTTA•ius , • Mini Bllcet... 9275 '61 Chevy . Vi1n It ' !w/yacht club bergif!ll. :Golt! Blvd. VARDEMAN aurfboar4 • • •) G?.-1\"'~~· ··tr:-.., =~ =~-I ~ ~.n .Aa BONANZA 5 HP, jaclc'abatt, 1699.00 I• 111 Sttp In 1A sterling w /rubles We are havtng a NEW Sylvania Sun Lanyi '9"7''. Wood tall bloek. Flbe~ Ji't(tfJ1JHI_! ·11;1• "'·..a... 70~ . 'ore:. tr, a!I " xlnt condition $135. i1t Ku1tom I h•w I W!sttnt belt ~· PIUs Whal• of • S.t•· • ~ w/~uatabl} cl&mp/"boldir. 1•ke(: Pl. 54M173 an 5 PM ' ~ 11 llrly ... • •IYO!Mlllf ~.D>l!Jf. a.1~ij '·, I 548-2667 bi1ll • .en kinds of. this 1-• that on Pianos and OrpM. Used once. ff.SO. 642-1724 to Fl' Motorcycle '·traD;r. Ul~.J ~r;;-· n~~ I i.si:•;; · ltlO llUtnel'OtJI to uemttt In You better come on down! eveninp • CarriH a.6 new tires, 70 " • f: t • t•or . ~ i ~..._~ , .. ~ . ' Bonama 3~ HP: Excellent ~tom Motors 1 lr!><2'clol5--' WARD'SBALDWllrSTUDtO NEW~24'"WOM>\l<'S """"" 175.'1!$-1540 I ' • ~·... 1:11: ••. ~ :,. .... -:..-;"St ~""'4' ' ' "''::~~rF ' 868ala<r,C.M. 54G-llll5 • !No. 3, Wes!'U rt;M Vllr',a:~ 1819 ~~EWc,,.M~ OR GIRLS BICYCLE, SPf. '· .Si!li!'c'.l\:: ~· ! \ •·1"'·-'-; ·1,g:--4 ~=-" :.t~>l ,~r.~·" ' . ' --. .,.. -'58 C>evY 6.P!CJtuv, 8' bed, Westc1 •or ur ,.... DEii MOD""" -.~,. •• -'· led :<§ ~Dr.o. -1~ 11 ... .:;,I . ..-•• ~ ,___, . . ~I ~ _,...,--:..,t•'Kll "-niuoMt!! ' l ~.~ .... .,_ -~· -·· · • • ---MotorcycH ·-·--·~-twn Dover 4 1B~bam _........, -. ·.-~ • 642-1724 EVENINGS.; '.,frS!_, · ~ .~ ' ·: , ~· • Anirw:lal '°°'*' \' ~ MZUMNS -_ ~ alter ; ""tld'O!llfromNnport.Nat'l · -· -. •-~,uo .... · 21.<-:-...,K~·· iai.:-~ 1·• • TRIUMPH 'GT Bon.nev·u.1..:::;cc...:.,. _____ _ ''"'•k. HAm!ONt> Si<lnwO)' Yam-HANDPalnledoUportraitO( -~·~.!! .. '!J!:~ no:l l 1 • , ~'ff."11. ll.,~ " ..... ;_ ,>_:J~=i, ',"",...-~ , , . . --~ '61 RANCllERO. N .. 11 ! ·"°"" aha. New le used ptincw Of you or your children frona·• C.b .,.,. ~:"-"",.con · • ,..,. ~ s..,..... M. .. ~~ aood cond. fender work. OK otbt rwtle. ~G, books. 6 •bun• ttlOll malu!L Beal N-In •ho!-ph, -'. $15. -Eve•lttP , · "I """"" • · ,. .... ' •-~I .... rond. 962-13156 all 4 Make offer. Call 962-178'. collection. )loclcs, tbeJl&. _,.. l"FOn~•••· -· a .,... 1-~ 2tfftr -!°'~ -· 16 ,._, '70 HONDA 175 Ka. nearly ~ p U lo . OJd bottlei &: Vfc. s0.. C&llt. at Sclunktt MUSIC JNT'L..Roytt.1 D&JtlAh Sterlin& n.iw.,...., mze "• -" , • • 1 .>..VMf. -~Z::. • Si:-..··-:·~ " '11Ct1 , • $560 , Call '64 Fo1.u , • r . Sact. !t. Sun. 2SO E. 'eo.1001N.~tn.patttaAna ~!I~~~:~,·~-place,·.~~-~-""!!°··~ Mt"' ·f:~1.C' ==-· .. :~~ :.,_r:,~. ;i6l~i:·~C.M. 9".00. At ft,fl rite ""'" .M. • ' ' ""·' A JO. 6\ .,1 . -• '6'1 6 '63 305 HONDM. tlfJOd ll'e ml8'!1y !Int. A SALE: """"'"" ~ HOBART CABit §PiN. Am. Teaoh ,..., chlld Iii l\'!UT&_Jllimllor. • ...afilllb , 1§1-'l&I""-•._,N..,., .,t)l-, ' cond. !415. C.O -Kliltorii Moton ~•Jnltc. ttems. AU or~ !:1' PIANO, Xhtt ~ Call ftild. ~ 'llt, neff: blind, UR~,.., ii '"1411-. , • .. ,,_ 1 5f9...J9S2 gu Balctt, CM HJ.a111S ~""". conct.Rtu.6'7SJ.M1 l..tt4pm Sf0..4292. &4&-MO ' #4$.D1738 ..• f. ~ ··,' .... ~· •• ..', '1 ----;_t · -.· • " ' .:::::::::__~.--.,--·.:::.::;;;;;;:;'-"'::_-..;:.:::= ..,...,. ' ·:' ...... ) ' t ; I l > ·--~ -· ----------M-.~ .:;_~ O \--J. -_Ji_• :.:: ..,L 4. ~ 'f ,l, . • . ' . . . ' v . . • I -·· ---·---"- • .. 4 •• ' I . ' r i ,, ---..----- 9S20 • TRANSPORTATION TRANS~RTATION TRANSPORTATION ·-· • TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION • -l!!'P!'!!'! A- FIAT l!6CIO Imported Aut9o 9600 t"'lmc::-==..;:;.A:;:ut::•=--'::'°°:= lmoo,.... -- ·-·~ "Leader in ~ Cear.b Cltle(' ZIMMERMAN 2MS HARBOR ILVD1 54M41D - '69 Datsun 'I JAGUAR '67 FIAT 850 " MK 1o .... ooe m1. XJnt 2 Door Coupe, lamp while ex,. cond. Fu.II pwr. 4 dr. All tttiol' w/w'inre interior 4 Be(! leather. New dll!c brake. $l086 Ml price ·or· &mati A radial oval&. Stereo AM· doWI\ lVVP03.1) dlr, Call ~&MJ ~~7~w, w:riftce PhU ~ '10 am, 540-3100 orl;,:=:,· ;;:::::;"'!::::===:::: '"·!f2ll. KARMANN GHIA __ Hf_llM ___ A_N;_;_ __ • 1 '61 Karmann Gh!A, reblt •••· Pick Up J,"'!..flma~: ... New clutcll. Very clean. $750. Call 673--9008 aft 6. 4 ·~· "" heav, duly Urea, Call 54"5910 alter 3;JO MERCEDES BENZ Jow nillea.ire. wn1 take traqe ==~~~~~== 11~~~~~J~~ o• flnahce privato party. JAGUAR (XW\'2'361. Call 546-4052 or -----~----494-9713. ENGLISH FORD -·- JAGUAR. HEADQUARTERS The only authorized JAGUAR dealer in tl1c entire Harbor Area. Con1pteh.: SALES SERVICE PARTS Poole BUICK IN COSTA •MESA 234 E. 17th. Street S.iS.7765 We have been an authorized Pontiac dealer for 25 years ~ . , the name ,Longpre hti be.en •Ssoc_iated with Pontiac: since 1926. · 01,l!HJo> (8Ul1')' ~ L.irg"~r 5t•l,.<t,.·n ~J,•w 8. U·Ld Mf;r ,,.,J"., e1·HI Jim Slemons Imps. Wa r 11~1 & Santa Ana ~1.1111 St. ~46.4114 1~ l\1erccdes Bera. 230 SL. Auto. l\1int cor.i:. SQ tirru.. 646-~. MG ·MG Sales, Servlc.!, Par11 ·lmmedlate Delivery, All Modela . J1ttuµorr ,Jl111µorts . NSU SALE OF THE YEAR BRAND NE\V 1!110 NSU 1200 C SEDANS 70..H .P. 3S ~f1LES PER GAL. SOLD AT INVOICE. SEE AT Kustom Motors 5'1D·5Hl 5 PORSCHE * '70 SUIARU l{l!rt! Now • Immediate Delivery e 90 MPH Capability • 35 M~ Ptr Gallon • Beautiful StyUrw: Teat Drive Today Al Kntom .Moton 845 ·s~r .. CM 540.SSU TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN e C-1 Winner e SPECIAL BJ.AO< PAINT. STRIPING l LACE • VINYL TOP .l DECK LlD 0 ANSENS e SEMPERtTS e 'GAUGES e SHAKY JAKE'S SHO\V CAR • S2650. ON DISPLAY AT JAME$1 LTD International Motorine .Aeceporie1 1.584 Old Ncwpo11 Blvd., ~M ------'67, F~STBA~K· T 0 Y. OT A Black beauty. 4 •pd., wloo int, "1ol runnll'li: cond. Small BIG down. WUI finance private party, (XIH831') dlr. CaU Phil a~ 10 AM 541).JlOO or '™-102S. SA VI NGS ... vw CamP'r. vory ci.an. Now Engine reblt lo lGOOCC. \Yater tank, link. bed. ice bOx. cabana. 118 \V. Stevens, 8.A. 545--4~ ON .Al.L NEW 1970 CORONAS e 55 TO CHOOSE F•OM e ALL MODILS e AUCO~IS e ALL IQUIPNINT lll67 VW Van Partial Camper 1600 Engine. sooo· niiles on engine. E:r.tra set of tire& &. rin1s and 2 saIXI tire•. 531-2164 EXECUTIVE DEMO'S BIGGER SAYINGS AT 1970 VW Sqbck. Sand Tan. radio. radial tlrez, Kon! i;hock.s. 9,000 mi's. J2600. Pri>J. pty. Lie. 231).-AGD. 646--0088 (24 hrs) EXAMtLE: 1970 4 DOOR SEDAN 4 speed, radio, w/walls. hcR l<'r, console. Ser. # 207584. \VAS $2241.75 NOW $1890.88 llLL MAXEY TOYOTA '70 TOYOTA'S In stock. Jmma-liate delivery, 900 So. Cst. Highway Laguna Beach 494-7503 * 540-3100 Bill MAXEY !TIOIYIQIT!Al V\V Van •59, '64 engine, camp.. er unit, work done on trans, <:omplcte new bttke system &: tires. Good <.11nd. $800. 530-1708 Bhvn 5 pm & 9 pm ·ss V\V Bus, perfect roD- ditlon. Mw;t sel.lr 116 Industrial \V1y, C , M. 673-$lO ,~,.,...,--~­'68 VW Sqbck, new tires, radio. Xl nt Corxl. $1600. Call 49-1-5677 '67 VW Bug, 33,000 mi. idnt oond.. orig owner $1250. 43')..4223 '66 BROWN V\V, blk Int., r&h. very iood cond. inside &: out. Must sell! 613-0097 '65 V\V. EMPJ eng, mq:1, glass fndrs, must sell $1000 or best offer. 613-2546 '59 V\V, re bit '64 engine, I reblt '63 transmission. Xlnt cond. $59j. 962-1507 '65 VW bug, sunroof, xlnl cond, clu'Ome \\•heels. tuned exhaust. $995. 499-2144 '69 V\V Squareback Under Warranty. ;2000 Cash. 646-7007 ··25'" '67 PORSCHE !112. New tires, Kombf shocks. brake" & battery. Engifl(' rebuilt. ;i I spd Ira.Ill!. S.1000 I offer· 1 646-5432 or Mariner Motel No. 20:=~~~­ PORSOIE '64 "C" A:\t/F':\1. 11811 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. Beach 847..aS$S S ml N. of O>&st Hwy, ort Bcll !T@YIOIT!AJ Ne\I• Cont"! lln's, C"hnn Mark 11 Wa51ons '63 VW SQBCK. $750 Gd. cond. 673-&118 eve11, 1967 VW Bug, radio & heater. good condition, must sell . sr~1366 '69 vw Sed Sunrool P,fany Extras. P.fust sell. $1550 or bst ofr. 67>-8178. BRAND NEW '70 LE ,.,ANS FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $1,000 DISCOUNT FROM STICKER PRICE BOB LONGPRE FOR SERYICE It'• lo.ded ••• comes with cordov1 top, 350 cubic Inch VI, Turbo Hydr1matic transml11ion, radio, heater, remote mirror, R1lly 11 wheels, conMle, power stHring, power dlK brakes, tinted windows, door ed51e guards, blck up lights, wlndshleld wishers, bucket se1ts, lifetime lubric1tion, Bowm1 Hal, 10 gallons of 51as, 5 D1yton 4 + 2 wide ovel tires, 50,000 mile tre1d wear warranty. ;t-2373702116537. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. $1,000 DISCOUNT FiROM OUR WINDOW STICKER IOI LONGPRE PONTIAC IS AUTHORIZED BY PONTIAC M 0 T 0 R , DIVISION TO PERFORM ALL WARRANTY SERVICE REGARDLESS OF WHERE YOU ORIGINALLY PURCHASED YOUR PONTIAC I '"""· ,...,, LET US HELP YOU ARRANGE YOUR FINANCING ! • SHOWROOM HOURS ' • Monday lhru Saturday, ' A.M. to 10 P.M. Sunday 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. BosLoNOPRE 13600 Beac h Bl vd. · Westm inster (Beach Blvd. at Gar den Grove fwy.) · Call 892·6651 or 636 ·2500 whh;. rac. clulch. GN'at Hi Lux Pickups perform. Priv. pty. S?J!O. 1 land Cruis.rs I '62 VW sunroof, radio. rebuUI &14--0705 _ -I Wagons engine. reliable mech. cond. PORSCHE l!l66, 912"' DEAN LEWIS 1:.:550::.·;..4'-'.·.....,.:..::.:.:.·~~~=I AJ\.1/FM, 46,000 111! .. chrome I l96r Harbor, C.M. S46-g30J 1968 WHlTE V\V Bug. 33,000 whls. cl<!tln. Pv1. p I y . mi. Like TM'!w! High back .,._3663 '67 CORONA ""''· 11<50. ,,,...,, ~-------'64 PORSC'Hf.. Es!rrme.ly clean. Lo mi's. Mus! ~cc ! Prlv ply. $3200. &14....fl227. 4 Door ~an . \\'ill take trade '58 V\V Van. New eng. tni.n11, or finance private party. clu!ch. paint. tin?s & tape $899 full price. IZLk."9'27J. deck SUIOO. 549-1597 'jjj Porsch<' C. $2000. Call 5<164051. '67 VW Sqbk. C~~1,-.-.. ~Lo-w- Ncw clult•h. Pirf'llis. rhrn1 "69 TOYOTA Corona. 4 Dr. nii. New ti.res. brks & batt. whls. Ex. Corn!. 512-51!15 Auto.: 18,000 i\.Ii. Clean. Best oHer. 64241655 '68 TARGA 912 silver, 5 sp<l. $1595. G-14-2300 Aft. 7 PM . '60 vw Bug, excellent cond. Ai\1/F l\1 short~·ave. Above '66 TOYOTA Corona. Auto. New valve11 &: rings. After awrag:C'. $.i395. 548-36j2 j R/H. $850. Financing avail. c'::.· .:."'::S...:1.::5.1::.1==--- '67 POR&:lIE-912~:.s;I. 548-26~ '64 V\V S600 All Xlras. Citrus Yrlto\j,· 1 I Or best olfer w/bl~i.ntrr._Ca!!_5:!.4--0776_ TRIUMPH , 5~8-Wl afler 6 pm '65 PoMl<:hc, hc>aul shapc, 5('(' J '66 V\V BUS. Split fr nt seat, to appl'l'<:. Ai\t /F'~f. chrm TRIUl\tPH TR 3 'j[I, rib, radio, ste!T'O, 'vood panel· rims. $3575. &12-1037 ! good uphol, 4 spd 11ynchro, lni;:. Call 67:>-8774 RENAULT '69 Renaul1 R-16. prrf. $1800 or n1akr offe.r. C11.ll j.11)...4()83 SIMCA 1962 Simca $100 Call 842-7019 afler 5 \ • ret.'Cnl valve job & tune-up. l Tops. $950/bst o f r . 968-3.)1> '64 TR-4 Re-bit Engine, black • Sharp looking. $1100. Call •l!:l!J.4341. !!Wj6 SPITFIRE. below book. wx>d ru nning cond. $975. 4~3636 aft<'r J. '58 TRIUMPH TR 3, \\•ire. rcblt en11:. $450. • 846-1 714 * VOLVO -·------1 145-WAGONS .164 -SEDANS VOLVO No\I' tn stock: Immediate Dellvery I BOOE Sport Coupe DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harboz, C.M. · 646-9.3!)3 ' Anniversary Special • We hive 1 la.roe selection of Coug1rs. 91 mod•l1; XR 7's & conver· tlble1 with prices you'll like. ''The good ole d1ys ire blck agelnl"' ~-~!.;,,1!?~ ... ~~~~~ .. ~ .. '"' ....... 53066 tl•lwx• whe•I c.ove11, etc. No, OF91H5171l'4 . ''•• , ••• Uc'"'' Johnson.son UIHLI '°BTIHH&l • II& :.Ell • Ill;: H • Ii HO•I II • New It tk l ttt TllM 111 1 O y..,. ti' l"f • lhicel&-Mete.•ry ~11tt .. ---·~ • ___ ....... -----"--• • • - -• . • •• I ~ y j, • ll • u , . '· . • . ' n ' '· -'· tl I. '· -' .. n ). n • • . " n ' I. . ' -" D - " ·' ,, d - • y ,. 0 k • . - ' ' l ...,.Ill' if •0 ... us b cMI . Tii Cl.Iott l't.0111 Id A'f , ., UR V. A.Jt...lte41 hlk i Wt! .. 11111 .ufh li.d. Hliilll~ liMt~ 141-4411 I LPl • SOUTH COAST MOTORS Htt• '-t.t•11cu1tv HAS . ' Th"' ,rlt M t"4 t11ly l~,,.4ty, A,rll JO, ,,,11,., i !1fyr41y, M1 y. I ~' 2114 . • -, ' UTM Mu-... • . I· , ie . _c w;; . ,m ..... ~-. "··= i. ~ , 1 1·~1 I I ~ • ' • • • I ' ~ . • • • • • ' • • --------~=~- ·~ • . ' ' II I ·I ,, ,, ' ........ I t • I • ---·~ ~. .............. . ' . . ·-'~· '-... . -_: -,:, ... __.,,_